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Gold reaches record levels on the back of trade anxiety, as Asia stocks rally with Wall Street

Gold reaches record levels on the back of trade anxiety, as Asia stocks rally with Wall Street

The stock market rose in most of Asia, and the chip sector was buoyant after a strong overnight rally by U.S. counterparts.

Wall Street's strong start to earnings season also lifted the mood. The simmering trade tensions between Beijing, Washington and Tokyo increased the appeal of safe-havens such as gold (which reached a new record high) and the Japanese yen while undercutting dollar.

Crude oil prices rose after U.S. president Donald Trump announced that Indian Prime minister Narendra Modi had promised to stop purchasing oil from Russia. This country supplies around one-third its imports.

Nikkei gained 0.8% in Japan, as shares related to chip technology and artificial intelligence boosted the index.

All three equity benchmarks reached new highs. The KOSPI in South Korea jumped by 1.8%, while Australia's equity index climbed by 1.1%.

Taiwan's TSMC will report earnings in the afternoon, following Dutch chip-making tools manufacturer ASML, which reported third-quarter orders, operating income and profits above market expectations.

Hong Kong and mainland Chinese stocks were also higher, after an initial wobble. This was despite the drag of trade tensions.

The U.S. Stock Futures are flat after overnight gains of 0.4% for the S&P500 and 0.6% for the tech-heavy Nasdaq. The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index soared 3%.

Stock investors were captivated by the AI narrative, and the signs of economic strength in the form of robust U.S. Bank earnings. This was despite Trump's announcement late Wednesday that "the U.S. has entered a trade conflict with China", which the markets already concluded based on recent comments made by both sides.

Gold reached a record $4,234.41 an ounce in the last session.

The dollar fell for the third consecutive session, falling 0.2% against a basket major counterparts.

It fell as much as 0.4%, to 150.51yen. This brought the psychologically important 150-yen line into focus. The Swiss franc also fell 0.4%, another haven currency.

The euro increased by 0.2% to $1.1667.

Scott Bessent, the U.S. Treasury secretary, said that an extension of current tariff relief was possible and that Trump expected to meet Chinese Leader Xi Jinping later this month in South Korea.

The brinkmanship that exists between the U.S.A. and China is still present, according to Kyle Rodda. Senior financial analyst at Capital.com.

It will only calm down when China backs off its threat to restrict rare earth exports, and the U.S. reverses the tariff increase scheduled for November 1 to 100%. Markets will be trembling until then."

Trump's trade maneuvers have also helped oil prices rise from five-month lows. Brent crude futures are up 0.9%, trading at $62.48 per barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures are also up 0.9%, trading at $58.81.

The U.S. President said on Wednesday that India will stop buying oil from Russia, its largest supplier. Washington would then try to convince China to follow suit as it intensifies its efforts to cut Moscow's revenue and to pressure it to negotiate an agreement in Ukraine.

(source: Reuters)