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Asian shares fall from record highs as bonds and tech-jitters rally

Asian shares fell from record highs Friday, as investors rushed to safe-haven bonds in anticipation of U.S. inflation data.

Wall Street's technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell?2%? after Cisco Systems reported a quarterly adjusted gross margin that was below expectations due to the rising costs of memory chip. This drove Cisco's shares down by 12%, wiping out $40 billion from its market capitalization.

The selling spilled into the tech giants, like Apple. Apple fell 5% on a daily basis in April of last year after President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day tariffs" spooked the markets. Transport companies were also affected by the fear of AI disruption.

Chris Weston is the head of research for Pepperstone. He said that "the prevailing tone" in markets was a rotation towards more defensive areas and companies with more predictable, steady and less cyclical earnings.

Investors are attempting to price an uncertain future with structural disruption.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan dropped 1.1% on Friday, reducing this week's gains to 3.7%. Japan's Nikkei fell 1.3% but still gained almost 5% this week.

The Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong fell 2.1%, while the blue chip index in China dropped 0.9%.

The Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures both fell by 0.2% while the EURO STOXX futures rose 0.1%.

Financial Times reported on Friday that Trump plans to'scale back tariffs on some steel and aluminum goods, citing sources familiar with the issue.

TRADERS AWAIT OUR INFLATION TEST

Overnight, the yield on the 10-year benchmark note fell 7 basis points, the biggest drop since October 10th. Early Friday, it was unchanged at 4.1134%.

The 30-year bond auction was very successful, and this helped to drive down the longer-term rates. Overnight, 30-year yields fell 8.5 basis points to 4.728%. This is the lowest level since December 3.

Fed funds futures rallied as well to reverse the majority of the losses that were caused by the payroll data, which led the markets to reduce the likelihood of a June rate cut. The odds of a rate cut in June are now priced at 70%. A total easing this year is expected to be?60 basis point.

The U.S. data on inflation will receive a lot of attention. Forecasts are based on a 0.3% monthly increase in the core measure. This would be sufficient to slow the annual rate to 2.5%, from the previous 2.7%.

Jose Torres is a senior economist with Interactive Brokers. He said that even a result in line would represent a significant deceleration compared to December. This could bolster the animal spirits of traders and bring energy back into cyclical trading.

The risk-sensitive Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar have taken a step down on the currency markets. The Aussie fell 0.2%, to $0.7071 after losing 0.5% overnight. Meanwhile, the Kiwi eased by 0.1%, at $0.6029.

Gold and silver are trying to recover after heavy losses. Gold rose by 1.3% to $4.984 per ounce after losing more than 3% overnight. Silver climbed 2.5% to $75. an ounce.

After a steep 3% drop overnight, oil prices continued to decline. AP reported on the transfer of a U.S. Aircraft carrier from the Caribbean into the Middle East, as tensions between the United States and Iran continue to escalate.

Brent crude futures dropped 0.2% to $77.37 per barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.3% to $62.66 a barrel.

(source: Reuters)