TOKYO — Shares in Asia rallied and the Australian dollar hit an eight-month high on Thursday as optimism over earnings and trade supported demand for higher yielding assets.
Tokyo’s broad Topix gauge of shares hit an all-time high, following new records on Wall Street overnight, after a trade pact between Japan and the US stoked speculation more deals would appear soon to head off sweeping tariffs. Nasdaq and S&P futures rose after results by Google parent Alphabet beat estimates to kick off the “Magnificent Seven” earnings season.
The US has also reached deals with the Philippines and Indonesia and an agreement with the European Union is also expected.
“Worst case concerns about tariffs in the US are probably dissipating to some degree at the moment, but nonetheless, tariffs are going up and that is a hurdle for consumers,” Brian Martin, ANZ’s head of G3 economics, said in a podcast.
The EU and US are closing in a trade deal that would impose 15 percent tariffs on European imports, while waiving duties on some items, according to officials from the European Commission. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said US and Chinese officials will meet in Stockholm next week.
Second-quarter earnings season is underway in the US, with 23 percent of the companies in the S&P 500 having reported. Of those, 85 percent have beaten Wall Street expectations, according to LSEG data.
Results from Magnificent Seven members, whose results have powered indexes to previous peaks, are in the spotlight for guidance on spending and returns surrounding artificial intelligence (AI).
Alphabet strongly beat estimates and cited massive demand for its cloud computing services as it hiked its capital spending plans. But electric car maker Tesla TSLAposted its worst quarterly sales decline in more than a decade and profit that trailed analyst targets.