Asian stocks reverse as investors await news on US-Iran peace talks
Concerns over the shaky truce between the US and Iran, which ends next week, reversed a record-breaking streak for equities this week.
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HONG KONG: Asian stock markets fell on Friday (Apr 17) as investors awaited news of an extension to the Iran-US ceasefire, while crude prices edged back down following the previous day's rally.
The losses follow a healthy, record-breaking week for equities fuelled by hopes the Middle East war, which is heading into a seventh week, could be close to an end after Donald Trump said negotiators were close to a deal.
But worries abound that a shaky truce agreed earlier this month - and which ends next week - could fall apart and spark a fresh market rout.
The US president on Thursday struck an optimistic tone, telling reporters that "it's looking very good that we're going to make a deal with Iran, and it's going to be a good deal", adding that talks between Washington and Tehran could resume this weekend.
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He also claimed Iran had "agreed to give us back the nuclear dust", using his name for the country's enriched uranium stockpile, and the deal would include "free oil" as well as the opening of the Strait of Hormuz.
"We had to make sure that Iran never gets a nuclear weapon," Trump said at the White House. "They've totally agreed to that. They've agreed to almost everything, so maybe if they can get to the table, there's a difference."
Iran has given no public indication it would surrender its stockpile.
However, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth took a tough line on the situation earlier in the day, telling a Pentagon news conference: "If Iran chooses poorly, then they will have a blockade and bombs dropping on infrastructure, power and energy."
Meanwhile, some Gulf Arab and European leaders fear a long-term agreement could take six months to achieve and called for the truce to cover such a time period, Bloomberg reported.
They wanted the Strait of Hormuz - through which about a fifth of global oil and LNG passes - opened immediately and have warned in private of a global food crisis if that is not achieved by next month, the report said.
Stocks fell across the region, with Tokyo, which hit a record high Thursday, among the biggest losers, with Seoul, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Singapore also well down.
Taiwan's TAIEX fell. On Thursday, it hit a market capitalisation of US$4.14 trillion to top the UK's market capitalisation and become the world's seventh biggest, according to Bloomberg data.
That came even after the S&P 500 and Nasdaq enjoyed record closes on Wall Street.
Analysts said traders were heading into the weekend positioning for any surprise developments.
Oil prices dropped more than one per cent, a day after sharp gains, though both main contracts remain just below US$100 a barrel.
There was some support from a 10-day ceasefire agreed between Israel and Lebanon that took effect at 9pm GMT (5am, Friday, Singapore time) on Thursday.
Tel Aviv has sent troops into its northern neighbour since militant group Hezbollah launched rocket attacks in support of Iran last month.
Hezbollah has not officially said if it will recognise the ceasefire but one of its lawmakers told AFP on Thursday that the group would respect it if Israeli attacks on its militants stopped.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the 10-day ceasefire with Lebanon offered an opportunity for a "historic peace agreement", but insisted that the disarmament of militant group Hezbollah remained a precondition.
Trump said he will invite the countries' leaders to the White House.
"While investors remain buoyed by talks of an extension in the US-Iran ceasefire and an announced Israel-Lebanon 10-day ceasefire, risk sentiment remains fragile as an immediate deal remains unlikely given that the countries remain far apart on key issues," wrote National Australia Bank's Skye Masters.
Fiona Cincotta of City Index, said: "While risks remain - particularly around disruptions to key shipping routes such as the Strait of Hormuz - markets are increasingly pricing in a scenario where oil prices have peaked unless tensions re-escalate."
But she warned that "the outlook remains fragile. A breakdown in diplomacy or renewed escalation could quickly reverse recent gains".
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