Asian markets show optimism: Stocks steady as US-Canada trade talks progress; eye on US jobs data due this week
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Asian markets show optimism: Stocks steady as US-Canada trade talks progress; eye on US jobs data due this week

Asian equity markets showed strength on Monday, buoyed by optimism over US-Canada trade negotiations and sustained demand in the global technology sector. However, gains were tempered by concerns around upcoming US employment data, which weighed on the dollar. Japanโ€™s Nikkei led the region with a 1.6 per cent gain, supported by strong performances in tech and export-oriented stocks. South Korea’s benchmark index also rose 0.8 per cent, following a positive lead from Wall Street. Chinese markets were mixed. The blue-chip CSI300 index edged up 0.2 per cent, helped by improved June data in manufacturing and services, while broader Asian sentiment remained cautious. The MSCI Asia-Pacific ex-Japan index dipped 0.2 per cent. The market gains came amid encouraging signals from North America, where Canada on Sunday agreed to drop its proposed digital services tax in a bid to move forward trade negotiations with the US. Talks, originally slated to wrap up by July 9 under President Donald Trump’s directive, have now been extended to July 21, with a potential finalisation by Labor Day (September 1). This is a significant turning point as Trump had announced suspension of trade talkswith Canada just days ago.Read more: US-Canada trade talks resume as PM Carney revokes tax on US tech firms Tech stocks continued to drive momentum globally, with Nasdaq futures up 0.4 per cent and S&P 500 e-minis rising 0.3 per cent. Heavyweights such as Nvidia, Alphabet, and Amazon remained in focus. Still, investor attention remains fixed on key US macroeconomic data and fiscal policy developments. A Senate vote on major tax and spending legislation remains uncertain ahead of Trumpโ€™s July 4 deadline. The Congressional Budget Officeโ€™s projection of a $3.3 trillion increase in national debt is also dampening global appetite for US Treasuries. The US jobs report- due early this week due to Fridayโ€™s holiday- forecasts 110,000 new jobs in June, with unemployment possibly ticking up to 4.3 per cent. A weaker labour market could increase expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts later this year, currently pricing in a cumulative 63 basis points reduction. The dollar slipped to 97.146 on the dollar index, with the euro climbing to $1.1727, its highest since September 2021. Sterling also hovered near multi-year highs at $1.3722. James Reilly of Capital Economics noted the greenback’s recent slide marked its sharpest sustained decline since the move to free-floating exchange rates in 1973. Meanwhile, gold traded at $3,279 an ounce- below its April peak- and oil prices continued to drop, with Brent crude at $67.50 and US crude at $65.09 amid ongoing concerns over OPEC+ supply levels.



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