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Stocks and precious metals are rising; the yen is on watch

Asia shares and precious metals rose on Tuesday, as investors continued to buy ahead of the "festive holidays", with a reading on the U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) expected later that day.

The fragile yen recovered as traders watched for any signs that Japanese authorities would intervene to stop the currency's decline.

Investors can catch up with a number of U.S. Economic releases that were delayed due to a record-breaking government shutdown in January.

The key data for Tuesday will be the third-quarter figures of growth, which are expected to show that the U.S. has continued to grow strongly.

The expected annualised growth is 3.3%. This is a slight drop from the previous quarter, due to a sharp decline in imports following a surge earlier in the year before the introduction of tariffs.

David Doyle, Macquarie Group's head of economics, said that the underlying growth is likely to slow in Q4 due to the prolonged government shutdown. He also noted the possibility of a new headwind coming from auto sales.

The market sentiment remained positive ahead of the result. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific index outside Japan rose by 0.39%. Tokyo's Nikkei fell 0.1% due to a stronger yen.

European futures are mixed, but Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures are little changed.

Shares of Nvidia soared overnight after a report that the company had told Chinese clients they planned to begin shipping their second-most powerful AI chip to China in mid-February, before the Lunar New Year holidays.

Novo Nordisk shares listed in the United States jumped 6% during extended trading on Monday after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved its weight loss pill.

Jose Torres is a senior economist with Interactive Brokers. He said, "Risk-on sentiment?is dominating Wall Street as we begin the week before Christmas, and investors are increasing equity and commodity exposures in preparation for year-end."

For now, traders will take their cues from the general feeling among participants that little is standing in the path of a Santa Claus rally manifesting.

Spot gold and silver reached all-time-highs in precious metals. This was driven by the demand for safe-haven assets as geopolitical tensions escalated, with the U.S. attempting to seize more tankers transporting Venezuelan oil.

After rising on Monday due to concerns about disruptions in supply, oil prices have eased slightly.

Brent crude futures dipped 0.26% to $61.91 per barrel, while U.S. oil fell 0.33% at $57.82 a barrel.

INTERVENTION RISK KEEPS YEN IN CHECK

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index remained flat, while China's CSI300 blue chip index rose 0.4%.

According to the summary of Tuesday's housing policy conference, China will intensify urban renewal in 2026 and make greater efforts to stabilize its property market as it prepares for its next Five-Year Plan (2016-2030).

The yen was the main focus on the foreign exchange markets as investors assessed the likelihood of an impending intervention by the Japanese authorities to support the currency.

Satsuki Katayama, the Finance Minister of Japan, said that Tokyo has the right to intervene on the currency market if the yen's value continues to fall. This is the strongest warning yet about Tokyo's willingness to do so.

The yen rose 0.7% to 155.99 against the dollar. It also made large gains against peers such as the euro and Swiss franc.

Vishnu Varathan is the head of Asia ex-Japan macro research at Mizuho. He says that intervention "may be more opportunistic than imminent."

He said, "And be sure there won't be any fixed 'line' in the sand."

The BOJ increased rates on Friday at the end of its policy meeting for December. This was widely anticipated and Governor Kazuo ueda gave few hints about the future extent of rate increases.

"Their message was so unimpressive... You hike, but it needs to be with conviction. "They didn't walk with conviction", said Alicia Garcia Herrero chief economist of Asia Pacific for Natixis.

The dollar has been on the back foot in other currencies. The euro rose by 0.15% to $1.1776 while the pound sterling increased by 0.24% at $1.3493.

(source: Reuters)