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As oil prices drop and earnings loom, shares in Asia are on the rise

Asian shares were mostly higher on Monday as Wall Street futures started the week on a positive note on the back of a good earnings season. Meanwhile, oil prices are dropping, which will ease inflationary pressures.

Although there have been no developments in the U.S. Iran peace talks, 160 ships were reported passing through the Strait of Hormuz from Monday to last Saturday.

OPEC+ agreed to increase output targets for August by 188,000 barrels a day, in addition to the increases made in June and July. Brent crude fell 0.6%, to $71.70 per barrel, a level near the four-month low. U.S. Crude also lost 0.5% at $68.38.

Futures indicate that there is a 78% probability of a stable outcome at the Federal Reserve meeting on July 29. This is due to the cooling of energy prices and a soft U.S. payrolls data.

The minutes of the Fed meeting last week are due Wednesday. They should provide some insight into the recent hawkish turn by certain board members.

Richard Yetsenga is the head of research for ANZ. He said: "Even if there were any fears that the Fed would move soon, we are safe, at least, for another month."

He added, "Our overall view is that the Fed will not do anything. But clearly we have been above the Fed's preferred measure of inflation for five years." "There's a risk that the Fed runs out of patience."

Investors should be able to focus on the earnings season ahead, when the AI boom will deliver bumper profits in tech.

The only two companies to have made a big splash this week are Delta Air Lines (and PepsiCo), though Samsung Electronics will make a huge one on Tuesday, as analysts anticipate an 18-fold rise in profits.

CHIMP MAKER BONUS PROFIT

According to LSEG SmartEstimate, the world's biggest memory chipmaker based on sales will likely report an operating profit for the quarter of April to June of 86 trillion won (56.35 billion dollars).

South Korea's hot market has cooled down a bit last week, but it is still up 92% this year as AI demand and limited supplies have boosted chip prices. The index gained another 2.25% Monday while Japan's Nikkei fell 0.1%.

The broadest MSCI index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan rose 0.4%.

In Europe, EUROSTOXX Futures were flat. DAX Futures rose by 0.2%, and FTSE Futures declined by 0.2%. S&P futures rose 0.5% while Nasdaq rose 1.4%, adding to a 2.1% increase last week.

The first data release is the U.S. ISM Services Survey is due to be released on Monday. Forecasts suggest a slight decline in June, but still a healthy 54.0.

Later in the day, a number of central bankers, including Christopher Waller from the Fed Board, will be speaking at ECB's conference, and Christine Lagarde, ECB President, is also scheduled to speak in Paris.

Markets are betting that New Zealand's Central Bank will increase its cash rate from 2.25% to 2.35% by a quarter-point, marking the first increase since mid-2023.

The policy makers have been predicting a tightening of rates for some time. However, this was before the fall in oil prices. There is a chance that they will surprise us by keeping them steady.

The?dollar index has stabilized at 100.880 on the currency markets after the disappointing payroll report for June. The euro remained flat at $1.1445 just above its recent 13-month low.

As speculators continue to be wary of Japanese interventions, the dollar is still trading at 161,45 yen - not far off its 40-year high of 162,84.

Gold was barely moved on the commodity markets at $4,177 per ounce after a 2% increase last week. (Reporting and editing by Jacqueline Wong; Wayne Cole)

(source: Reuters)