Global Market Check | Asian shares edge higher as volatile week draws to an end
Asian stocks traded higher on Friday, supported by easing oil prices and improved global risk sentiment amid Middle East tensions. MSCI’s Asia Pacific Index rose up to 1% after Wall Street rebounded. Hopes of partial normalization in oil boosted l...

MSCI’s benchmark Asia Pacific Index gained as much as 1% after the S&P 500 Index closed 0.1% higher, reversing an earlier loss of 1.5%. Sentiment toward equities improved after oil prices eased off their highs following a report that Iran is drafting a protocol with Oman to monitor traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, having effectively shut it down since the start of the war.
“The improvement in U.S. risk appetite has spilled over” into regional equities, said Hitoshi Asaoka, chief strategist at Asset Management One Co. in Tokyo. “While oil prices may not fully return to previous levels, if they do partially normalize, there is considerable room for a rebound from a liquidity perspective.”
A number of Asian markets were shut for holidays Friday including Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, the Philippines and Indonesia. US stock markets will also be closed for a holiday, though the government is still scheduled to publish a slate of economic data, including March nonfarm payrolls.
South Korea led regional equity gains with the benchmark Kospi jumping as much as 3.5%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose 1.1%. China’s CSI 300 Index reversed an earlier advance to drop 0.4%.
Treasury futures were little changed in Asia with the cash market shut until US hours for a half day of trading.
US stocks had started off Thursday deep in the red after a speech from Trump late Wednesday did little to reassure investors that the war in the Middle East was nearing a swift resolution, though he has previously set a two-to-three-week timeline for ending the conflict. On Thursday, the president issued fresh threats on Iranian infrastructure in a bid to pressure Tehran in negotiations.
“With U.S. payrolls coming up and a holiday ahead, markets are wary of what could happen over the weekend — especially the first weekend after,” Trump’s speech said Rina Oshimo, a senior strategist at Okasan Securities Co. in Tokyo. “If attacks escalate or retaliations occur, oil prices could remain elevated for longer.”
Oil rallied above $110 a barrel Thursday after Trump vowed an escalation in the war in Iran over the coming weeks. West Texas Intermediate surged 11%, while the global Brent benchmark settled near $109. Europe’s diesel futures benchmark climbed above $200 a barrel for the first time since 2022.
War Pattern
The higher close for the S&P 500 on Thursday ran counter to a pattern of late-week selloffs that have hit the market ever since the war began, as nervous investors unwind positions that could be upended if weekend developments threaten to worsen the hit to the global economy.Tesla Inc. shares fell after the company posted one of its worst sales quarters in years, missing Wall Street’s expectations, as it struggles to turn around its core business and navigate an increasingly challenged electric-vehicle market.
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