
The gains were also fuelled by a surge in regional tech giants as the artificial intelligence (AI) trade roared back into the spotlight after the head of Nvidia said the sector needed “trillions of dollars” more investment.
Markets have been whipped by volatility this week after the US president said at the weekend he would hammer several nations – including Germany, France, Britain and Denmark – with levies for their pushback against his grab for the North Atlantic island.
The threat sparked a warning of retaliation, with French President Emmanuel Macron raising the possibility of deploying an unused, powerful instrument aimed at deterring economic coercion, fanning fears of a trade war between the economic giants.
However, traders breathed a sigh of relief on Wednesday when the US president told the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos that he would not take the Danish autonomous territory by force – as he had hinted – and later said he had retracted his tariff threat.
“We have formed the framework of a future deal with respect to Greenland and, in fact, the entire Arctic Region,” he wrote in a post on Truth Social, without providing details.
“Based upon this understanding, I will not be imposing the Tariffs that were scheduled to go into effect on Feb 1st,” he said.
The news fuelled a rally of more than 1% in US stocks, which had tanked on Tuesday on their return from a long weekend.
Asia followed suit, with Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Mumbai, Taipei and Manila all up.
Paris and Frankfurt jumped more than 1% at the open, while London was also sharply higher.
Gold and silver, which have hit multiple records this week on a push into safe havens by worried traders, both fell on Wednesday and extended their retreat in Asia.
Pepperstone’s Michael Brown wrote that “the threat of 10% tariffs on various European nations has been unwound (and) the tail risk of a tit-for-tat tariff war has been eliminated”.
“Participants can move on, and finally the hysteria and hyperbole that was doing the rounds over this matter can be put to bed,” he added.
Observers said there had been a pick-up in optimism among investors about the “Trump put” in which big losses in stocks would force the president to change course.
The advances in Asia were led by tech-heavy markets Tokyo, Taipei and Seoul, with the latter topping 5,000 points for the first time as chip companies enjoyed bumper gains.
The surge came after Nvidia boss Jensen Huang told the WEF that the infrastructure to develop and power generative AI models will require much more cash.
He told delegates that today’s AI boom “has started the largest infrastructure buildout in human history”.
“We’re now a few hundred billion dollars into it… there are trillions of dollars of infrastructure that needs to be built out” in fields including energy, cloud computing and electronics.
South Korean chip leaders Samsung and SK hynix gained around 2%, while in Japan tech investment giant SoftBank piled on more than 11%, with chip firms Advantest 5% higher and Tokyo Electron up more than 3%.
Japanese precision tools maker Disco Corporation is trading up 17% in Tokyo after stronger-than-expected earnings.
TSMC was up more than 1% in Taipei.