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Asian stocks are up and gold is rebounding in a calmer market

The gold and Asian stock markets were both on the rise on Tuesday, as the trade tone remained calmer after the wild swings on metals markets. Factory activity.

Japan's Nikkei gained 2.5% on Tuesday to recover Monday's losses, while South Korea's KOSPI climbed 4%. Futures pointed to a recovery for Hong Kong, while S&P futures rose 0.3% as traders awaited a busy week of earnings.

Investors are looking forward to the central bank meeting that will take place in Australia on Tuesday. A strong jobs market, and a surprising hot reading of fourth-quarter inflation have led investors to bet on a rate hike of 25 basis points.

Australian shares rose 1.3% early in the day and the Aussie Dollar, which had been bumpy, but recorded its biggest monthly increase in three years last January, was steady at $0.6958.

Since U.S. president Donald Trump nominated Kevin?Warsh as the new Federal Reserve chairman, metal prices have been tumbling.

Gold rose 3% to $4,800 per ounce in Asia this morning, nearly 9% higher than Monday's low. Silver traded 5% higher at $83.34 per ounce.

Warsh's shrinking of the Fed balance sheet is pushing up bond rates, which is bad for precious metals because they pay no income.

The price drop on 'Friday and Monday' went beyond the fundamentals. It was a blow to leveraged positions, and traders were forced to sell other assets in order bail out their 'losing bets.

Christopher Forbes, CMC Markets' head of Asia and Middle East, said: "It was a flushing-out of leverage that had built up in the system."

The bigger question is the pain from the unwinding of the gold and the silver...I am not sure that everyone will make it.

WALL STREET STEADIES

The PMI data revealed that overnight, U.S. manufacturing activity increased for the first time since a year, in January. This pushed up Treasury yields, but did not change the outlook for rates cuts.

The benchmark 10-year yields in Tokyo were unchanged at?4.275%, while the two-year yields in New York, which had risen four basis points, remained at 3.57%.

Alphabet shares reached a record high ahead of the earnings due later this week. Disney shares fell 7.4% after it warned about a drop in international visitors at its U.S. Theme Parks and a slump in earnings for its TV and Film division.

On Tuesday, AMD and Super Micro Computer, a server equipment manufacturer, are expected to present their after-market reports.

After last week's dramatic drop in the dollar, currency markets found a new level. The euro was trading at $1.18 during the Asia session. This is down from highs of $1.20 reached late in January.

The yen is trading at 155.54 dollars and has lost about half of the gains made against the dollar after talk of a possible joint U.S./Japan intervention in order to boost the yen.

Polls indicate that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s Liberal Democratic Party is likely to win a landslide at the weekend’s elections -- which would put pressure on bonds, and the yen. It would also give a mandate for her fiscal-loosening agenda.

The rupee is expected to rise as a result of a U.S. India trade agreement announced overnight by Trump. It reduces tariffs and stops Indian purchases Russian oil in exchange for a suspension. Benchmark Brent crude ended 6% lower at $66.30 a barrel on the back of easing tensions between the U.S. and Iran. (Reporting and editing by Sam Holmes; Reporting by Tom Westbrook)

(source: Reuters)