The Nikkei’s rise puts year-to-date gains in Tokyo at 25%. That’s a snip of the 75% boom in Seoul this year, but it still dwarfs the S&P 500’s 8% gain and even the Nasdaq’s 11% advance, showing that the biggest scramble for chips and tech equipment is overseas.
Wall Street continued its climb to new records, however, with the S&P 500 up another 1% on Wednesday as hopes of an Iran peace deal resulted in a nearly 8% retreat in crude oil prices.
Oil prices slid further heading into Thursday, with Brent and WTI crude now trading at around $99 and $93 per barrel, respectively. Bond yields fell as oil prices ebbed.
Europe’s STOXX 600 gained 2% on Wednesday, leaving it some 2% away from pre-Iran war levels, though the index paused in early trading on Thursday.
Iran is currently reviewing the latest U.S. proposal to end the war, which would reportedly kick off 30 days of detailed negotiations to reach a full agreement. Despite the renewed peace hopes, however, military activity in the Gulf and Lebanon continued sporadically.
Back in the macroeconomic world, the build-up to Friday’s U.S. payrolls release has shown little damage to hiring so far from the two-month energy shock. ADP’s private sector jobs readout for April came in ahead of expectations.
Elsewhere, eyes are drifting to the upcoming Trump-Xi summit slated for next week, while Thursday brings local elections in the UK that promise to have a major bearing on Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s position as leader of the ruling Labour Party.
With that, onto today's column.