Asia sees cautious open; US stocks buoyed by Trump: Markets wrap
Stocks in Asia show mixed reactions to Trump's increasing chances of winning a second term after surviving an assassination attempt. Market volatility expected due to tariff threats. Federal Reserve Chair hints at possible interest-rate cuts. Inve...

Equity benchmarks rose in Japan and Korea, while those in Australia were steady. Futures for Hong Kong stocks pointed to a decline. US futures edged higher in early Tuesday trading after benchmarks there climbed and traders priced a greater chance of a Trump win after he survived an assassination attempt.
Caution in Asia comes amid signs of emerging market volatility in anticipation that Trump’s tariff threats will be implemented. A gauge of such currencies snapped eight straight days of gains on Monday, with those in South Africa and Mexico — both seen as bellwethers of risk appetite — leading the losses. The dollar was little changed.
Within the regions, investors have been allocating based on which countries will be seen as friends or foes, given the Presidency will be more based on bilateral political and trade ties over multilateral policy, said Kyle Rodda, a senior analyst at Capital.com in Melbourne.
“His view of the world is fairly zero sum” with Japan seen on friendly terms and China in the “bad books,” he said in a phone interview. “There’s definately still that figurative pairs trade going on at the moment, which is long Japan and short China.”


Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said in an interview that second-quarter economic data has provided policymakers greater confidence that inflation is heading down to the central bank’s 2% goal, possibly paving the way for near-term interest-rate cuts. He made clear he didn’t intend to send any specific message about the timing of rate reductions.
Meanwhile, the chances of Trump winning a second term rose in the aftermath of Saturday’s shooting, according to PredictIt data.
“We were shocked by the attempt on former President Trump’s life, but suspect that markets will digest the news quickly and with little fanfare,” said John Stoltzfus at Oppenheimer Asset Management. “Shocking events tend not to deter investors, who we expect will remain focused on economic and earnings results.”
To Mark McCormick at TD Securities, markets seem “less fussed about elections” and much keener to enjoy the slide in US data surprises, especially the latest consumer-price index reading.
“Everyone is passing around their favorite Trump trades — but I think we’ve seen over the past century that stock market moves are more random than what a president can dictate,” said Peter Boockvar at The Boock Report.
Download ET Markets APP