Asian Stocks Fall Ahead of US Nonfarm Payroll Data: Markets Wrap


(Bloomberg) — Asian equities fell on Friday after Wall Street traders navigated falling stocks amid whipsawing tariff headlines.

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Shares in Australia and Japan fell more than 1% in opening trade while equity index futures for Hong Kong slipped. Drops for Japanese benchmarks reflected declining risk sentiment and a Thursday rally in the yen.

The S&P 500 slid 1.8% and the Nasdaq 100 sank 2.8%, with the tech-heavy gauge on the brink of a technical correction. US futures partly retraced the losses early Friday after Broadcom Inc. gave an upbeat revenue forecast. The chipmaker reassured investors that spending on artificial-intelligence computing remained ongoing, pushing its shares around 15% higher in after-market trading.

In a sign of fragile sentiment during regular trading on Thursday, US stocks failed to stage a rebound after a decision by President Donald Trump to delay levies on Mexican and Canadian goods covered by the North American trade deal. The seesawing outlook on tariffs added to the downbeat mood on Wall Street ahead of nonfarm payrolls data on Friday.

“Right now, trade policy is dominating market action,” said Chris Larkin at E*Trade from Morgan Stanley. “Until the tariff smoke clears, it could continue to be a bumpy ride for traders and investors.”

The post-hours rally spread to tech companies that were among the hardest hit on Thursday. Nvidia Corp. and Marvell Technology Inc., which plunged during the main session as its outlook disappointed investors, rose after the closing bell.

Trump exempted Mexican and Canadian goods covered by the North American trade agreement known as USMCA from his 25% tariffs until April 2. The move was the latest in a series of stop-start actions on levies aimed at the countries.

Later comments from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent all but confirmed tariffs will be coming. Bessent rejected the idea that tariff hikes will ignite a new wave of inflation, and suggested that the Federal Reserve ought to view them as having a one-time impact.

Treasuries rallied on the short end of the curve Thursday but were otherwise little changed. An index of the dollar fell for a fifth session, its longest losing streak in almost a year. The Mexican peso and the Canadian dollar rose on news of the potential tariff reprieve. Australian and New Zealand yields fell early Friday.



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