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Asian Shares Pull Back from Highs as Oil Gains on Iran Risk

  • Japan, South Korea, Taiwan stock indexes hit new highs before falling
  • Wall Street closed at all-time highs on earnings optimism
  • Brent crude futures rise 1.4% to $103 a barrel, up for 4th day

SYDNEY, April 23 (Reuters) - Asian shares ​retreated from record highs on Thursday as oil prices extended their gains on renewed shipping woes in ‌the Gulf, underscoring fragile risk sentiment as a peace deal eludes the U.S. and Iran.

European stocks are bracing for a much weaker open, with pan-region futures down 1.1%. Wall Street futures also skidded 0.5% in Asia.

Overnight, the S&P 500 climbed 1% and the Nasdaq jumped 1.6% to notch fresh record-closing ​highs, helped by a strong start to the earnings season that has eased concerns about the health of the U.S. ​consumer despite rising energy prices from the Iran war.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan ⁠had earlier tracked Wall Street and rallied to a record of 831.56 points, but selling soon kicked in. It was last ​down 0.5%.

Japan's Nikkei vaulted to a new high for a second day before falling 0.9%. Markets in Taiwan and South Korea also ​hit new highs and then turned lower.

China's blue chips fell 0.8% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index skidded 1.1%.

Higher oil prices were partly to blame, with Brent crude futures up another 1.4% on Thursday to $103.3 a barrel, having jumped 3.5% overnight to cross back above $100.

Iran on Wednesday captured two container ships ​seeking to exit the Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz, tightening its grip on the crucial waterway, as investors watch if the ​fragile ceasefire in the Middle East will hold.

"Markets look very on edge here. We are still in a no-war, no-peace zone, and that means ‌even an ⁠unverified scare of escalation can jolt oil and knock risk assets lower," said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo.

"Oil’s jump, even without a single clean trigger, is the giveaway that investors remain highly sensitive to geopolitical tail risk."

Overnight on Wall Street, shares of GE Vernova surged 13.75% after the power equipment maker raised its annual revenue forecast on the AI boom, and Boeing advanced over ​5% after a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss.

Electric automaker ​Tesla reported a surprise positive free ⁠cash flow in the first quarter, but its projection of sharply higher spending plans on AI and robotics drew scepticism from investors, with its shares down 2% after the bell.

Treasury yields rose ​with oil prices. The two-year U.S. Treasury yield rose 2 basis points to 3.8106%, after inching ​up 1 bp ⁠on Wednesday. The 10-year yield increased 3 bps to 4.3214%, after finishing little changed overnight.

Currencies were mostly calm, with the dollar holding onto small gains from overnight. The euro was steady at $1.17, just above a 10-day low of $1.1691, having lost 0.3% overnight.

The risk sensitive Australian dollar ⁠slipped 0.2% ​to $0.7147.

"Markets have been remarkably effective at looking through risks – and may continue to ​be. But the list of risks is growing as resolutions remain elusive," said Laura Cooper, global investment strategist at asset manager Nuveen.

"The dissonance cannot hold indefinitely ... At ​some point, the weight of what is being ignored could become the only one that matters."

Editing by Kim Coghill and Shri Navaratnam

Source: Reuters


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