By Kevin Buckland
TOKYO (Reuters) -Stocks rose across most of Asia on Thursday, with the chip sector buoyant following a strong rally among U.S. peers overnight and a robust start to Wall Street’s earnings season also lifting the mood.
At the same time, simmering trade frictions between Beijing and Washington increased the appeal of safe havens such as gold – which renewed a record high – and undercut the dollar.
Crude oil rose from five-month lows after U.S. President Donald Trump said Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had pledged his country would stop buying oil from Russia, which supplies about one-third of its imports.
Japan’s Nikkei advanced 1.2%, with chip- and artificial intelligence-related shares boosting the index.
The momentum increased after Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC reported record earnings, while also benefiting from political developments that put fiscal dove Sanae Takaichi’s bid to become Japan’s prime minister back on track.
Taiwanese share trading was already closed at the time of TSMC’s announcement, ending the day up 1.4% and reaching a record.
South Korea’s KOSPI jumped 2.2% to its own record peak after the country’s chief presidential policy adviser said he was “optimistic” about ongoing talks to finalise a trade deal with the U.S.
Australia’s equity benchmark added 0.9% and also reached a record high with poor jobs data raising the odds of central bank easing.
However, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.7% and mainland Chinese blue chips were flat in a volatile session as investors pondered the path of trade ties with the U.S.
European stock futures pointed 0.3% lower.
U.S. stock futures were overall flat following a 0.4% gain for the S&P 500 and a 0.6% rise for the tech-heavy Nasdaq overnight. The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index surged 3%.
“I remain of the belief that the longer-run path of least resistance continues to point firmly to the upside” for equities, said Michael Brown, senior research strategist at Pepperstone.
“Though conditions have been choppy, I’d argue strongly that this is another of those occasions where the intraday price action largely represents noise.”
GOLD SURGE CONTINUES, DOLLAR DIPS
Optimism over the AI narrative and signs of economic strength from robust U.S. bank earnings stole the spotlight for stock investors, even with Trump pronouncing late Wednesday that the U.S. is “in a trade war with China” – confirming what markets had already concluded from recent comments from both sides.
Gold rose as much as 0.8% in the latest session to reach an unprecedented $4,241.77 per ounce.