
Rally buoys Asian shares amid Japan/US trade deal
Trump late on Tuesday announced a trade deal with Tokyo that he said will result in Japan investing $US550 billion ($A842 billion) into the United States and paying a 15 per cent reciprocal tariff. It followed an agreement with the Philippines that will see the US collect a 19 per cent tariff rate on imports from there.
"Though details are not yet available, it is commendable that the 25 per cent baseline tariff was avoided," Norihiro Yamaguchi, senior Japan economist at Oxford Economics said on Wednesday.
"In the short run I think lowered uncertainty will be welcomed in the equity market. But global trade policy uncertainty will remain high, meaning that today's conclusion will provide little upside to the real economy."
The US president also said representatives from the European Union are coming for trade negotiations on Wednesday.
In another positive development, US and Chinese officials will meet in Stockholm next week to discuss an extension to the August 12 deadline for negotiating a trade deal, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said.
Japan's Nikkei rose 1.7 per cent on Wednesday as shares of automakers surged. Mazda Motor rallied 12 per cent while Toyota Motor jumped 10 per cent.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan advanced 0.2 per cent underpinned by higher openings in Australia and South Korea.
The yen initially gained on the news, but was last flat at 146.68 per dollar.
Nasdaq futures climbed 0.1 per cent and S&P 500 futures gained 0.2 per cent in Asia.
Overnight, Wall Street closed mixed as investors assessed a spate of varied earnings and signs that Trump's trade war is hitting corporate profit margins.
General Motors tumbled 8.1 per cent after the automaker reported a $US1 billion ($A1.5 billion) hit from tariffs to its quarterly results.
Investors are now waiting for results from Tesla and Google's parent Alphabet - the Magnificent 7 stocks that have driven much of the market rally fuelled by AI optimism.
In the foreign exchange market, the dollar index was flat at 97.45 against its major peers, having slipped 0.4 per cent overnight to mark the third straight day of declines.
Benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields ticked up 2 basis points to 4.3579, after slipping three basis points overnight, as Trump continued to lash out at Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for not cutting interest rates, although Bessent said there was no need for him to step down immediately.
Bessent did say the Fed's vital independence on monetary policy is threatened by its "mandate creep" into non-policy areas and he called on the US central bank to conduct an exhaustive review of those operations.
Spot gold prices were steady at $US3429 ($A5252) an ounce.
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