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Asia stocks surge ahead of Bank of Japan's rate decision

Early Asian trading on Friday saw tepid gains ahead of the Bank of Japan meeting. It is widely expected that it will?keep rates at current levels.

The Nikkei was 0.2% higher, and MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan gained 0.4%. S&P 500 futures traded in a range of gains and losses. They last moved up by 0.1%.

The Wall Street stocks extended their recovery for the second day on Thursday after U.S. president Donald Trump backed down from earlier threats to impose tariffs on European products and denied that he would take?control of Greenland through force. The S&P 500 rose 0.5%, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.9%.

Analysts from Societe Generale stated in a report that "markets have welcomed this shift with a'rebound in risk assets, and a flattening government bond yields." However, policy uncertainty is still high. "There are more twists and changes likely."

The yen fell 0.1% against the dollar before the BOJ meeting. This was after the government released data earlier in the day that showed Japan's core prices for consumer goods rose 2.4% from December of last year, as expected by analysts.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the strength of the greenback against a basket six currencies, has remained at 98.329 after Thursday's biggest one-day drop in six weeks.

Fed funds futures indicate a 96% implied probability that the U.S. Federal Reserve is likely to keep rates unchanged at its next 2-day meeting, scheduled for January 28. This was little changed compared to a day before.

The yield of the 10-year Treasury Bond in the United States was up by 0.2 basis points at 4.247%.

The dollar sank to its lowest levels of the year, and precious metals markets broke records. Gold rallied for the fifth consecutive day, rising 0.3% to $4.951.47 an ounce. Silver was up 1.7%, at $97.85.

Korean stocks led gains in Asia. The Kospi rose for a third consecutive day by 1,1%, after it crossed the 5,000-mark for the first time. This was a landmark that President Lee Jae Myung promised to achieve through market reforms, and tax measures, to close the so-called 'Korea Discount.

Intel, which struggles to meet demand for AI data centres' server chips, forecast revenue and profits below market expectations on Thursday. Shares fell 11% after hours trading.

Brent crude futures last rose 0.4% to $64.30 per barrel. This was after Trump's more lenient tone toward Greenland, Iran, and other geopolitical issues eased concerns about supply disruptions.

Bitcoin rose 0.3% to $89,499.47 while Ether climbed 0.2% to $2,948.14. (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger; Gregor Stuart Hunter)

(source: Reuters)