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Asia stocks rise as Nikkei sets fresh record, dollar drops

Asian stocks rose?for the second day on early Tuesday trading, led by a rally in Tokyo’s?benchmark following Prime Minister Takaichi’s decisive victory in the Japanese election over weekend.

The broadest index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan, MSCI, rose 0.4%. Nikkei's 225, however, jumped by 2.1%. It was the third day in a row that Nikkei has reached a new record high.

After a two day rally, U.S. equity e-minis have cooled down, with S&P500 e-minis down by 0.1%. This partially reverses gains made on Wall Street over night. S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite rose 0.5% on Monday as technology stocks recovered from last week's AI sparked selloff.

Kees Verbaas is the global head of fundamental Equity at Robeco.

He added: "The investment programmes of large companies are increasing, not decreasing... which is usually good for economic activity." "A large part of the AI supply chains is only possible because of emerging markets."

Kevin Hassett, White House Economic Advisor, said that several important economic reports are due to be released later this week, including retail sales, inflation, and delayed payrolls. He also stated on Monday that U.S. jobs gains could be lower in upcoming months, as immigration policies under the Trump administration slow the growth of the labor force and new AI tools increase productivity.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures greenback strength against a basket six currencies, traded steady at 96.97, near its lowest level of the month. The index recorded its largest one-day decline in two weeks after a Bloomberg News article that stated Chinese regulators had advised financial institutions to reduce holdings of U.S. Treasury Bonds due to concerns over concentration risk and volatility.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced on Monday that senior U.S. Treasury officials visited China last Thursday "to strengthen channels" of communication between Washington and Beijing.

The dollar traded at 6.9167 Chinese Yuan against the Chinese yuan.

In a research paper, analysts at Alpine Macro stated that "elevating the role of the renminbi on the global stage is moving up the policy agenda." Beijing's primary goal is to reduce the vulnerability of the dollar, not to challenge its dominance.

The yield on U.S. Treasury bonds of 10 years increased by 0.2 basis points to 4.196%.

The market continues to indicate the Federal Reserve will stay on hold until at least June. Fed funds futures indicate a 17.7% implied probability of a 25 basis-point rate cut at the U.S. Central Bank's next two day meeting on March 18 compared to an 18.4% implied chance on Friday.

WTI crude oil was down by 0.1% on the commodities market, at $64.15 per barrel.

Silver fell 2.7% to $81.13 an ounce. Gold dropped 0.9% to $5.018.59 an ounce.

Bitcoin fell 0.9% to $69756.85 while Ether dropped 1.1% to $298.21. (Reporting and editing by Gregor Stuart Hunter, Stella Qiu)

(source: Reuters)