Asian markets diverge with eyes on Nvidia earnings

Asian markets diverge with eyes on Nvidia earnings

Analysts expect Nvidia's revenue to soar 53% to US$46 billion, but this is about more than revenue beats.

Korea market
A highly unusual move by US President Donald Trump to fire Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook has heavily impacted markets this week. (EPA Images pic)
HONG KONG:
Asian markets diverged this morning following broad losses the previous day, as attention turns from political pressure on the US central bank to a key earnings report by AI giant Nvidia.

Yesterday’s declines in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul and across the continent were followed by modest gains on Wall Street as investors tried to look past US President Donald Trump’s move to oust a Federal Reserve (Fed) governor.

In Europe, shares fell and the Paris stock market tumbled over fears that France’s minority government could be toppled, after Prime Minister Bayrou proposed a confidence vote to break an impasse over his proposed budget cuts.

During yesterday’s morning trading in Asia, the main benchmarks in Hong Kong, Sydney and Taipei were up narrowly.

Tokyo and Seoul were flat, while Shanghai and Bangkok were down.

California-based AI chip giant Nvidia will report second-quarter financial results this evening, closely watched as a bellwether for the industry as worries about a tech bubble rise.

“The company has outgrown the tech sector and become the market’s lodestar,” wrote Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management in a note.

“Analysts expect revenue to soar 53% to US$46 billion, but this is about more than revenue beats,” he said.

“The crowd wants reassurance that the AI revolution isn’t just smoke and mirrors,” he added.

Heavily impacting markets this week has been a highly unusual move by Trump to fire a Fed governor, Lisa Cook.

The US leader cited allegations of false statements on her mortgage agreements, but Cook said Trump had no authority or legal cause to fire her while her lawyer announced a planned legal challenge on Tuesday.

The step adds to fears about the independence of the central bank, fuelled by Trump’s repeated public demands to Fed chairman Jerome Powell to lower interest rates.

Powell suggested on Friday that more cuts to US interest rates were on the horizon, causing markets to surge.

Investors are also awaiting a US economic growth update on Thursday and a key inflation gauge on Friday for clues on how far interest rates might fall – or not – in the coming months.

Oil prices continued yesterday’s slow fall, paring back recent increases as traders track a possible peace deal to end the war between Ukraine and key crude producer Russia.

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