The Nikkei 225 Index declined 0.4% during open, pushing the MSCI Asia Pacific Index lower post four days of gains. The yen was a touch weaker against the dollar. Contracts also indicated a weaker open for Hong Kong stocks, after the S&P 500 Index added 0.6% to top a closing record hit in late December.
Precious metals were mixed with silver rising 1.5%, while gold edged lower. A Bloomberg gauge of the dollar held its gains from the last session. Oil extended losses after President Donald Trump said
Venezuela would turn over as many as 50 million barrels of crude to the US.
Escalating tensions between Asia’s two largest economies are in focus in the region, even as optimism over artificial intelligence and expectations of Federal Reserve easing propelled US shares to a new high. Investors have largely shrugged off geopolitical risks, including those tied to Venezuela, extending a three-year bull run fueled by demand for AI-linked shares.
China imposed controls on exports to Japan with potential military uses, escalating tensions between the two countries.
All dual-use items are banned from being exported to Japan for military use effective immediately, China’s Ministry of Commerce said in a statement Tuesday. The government’s export control list features more than 800 items, ranging from chemicals, electronics and sensors to equipment and technologies used in shipping and aerospace.
The export controls mark China’s latest move in a pressure campaign against Japan, after Sanae Takaichi became her nation’s first sitting leader to say Tokyo could deploy its military if Beijing attempted to seize self-ruled Taiwan.
Earlier, a prominent group of Japanese executives had put on hold a planned visit to Beijing.
Meanwhile, the AI theme remained in focus after a flurry of updates from tech companies at the CES trade show in Las Vegas. Gainers in the tech space on Tuesday included shares of Amazon.com Inc., Micron Technology and Microsoft Corp.
Also, Nvidia Corp., countering fears about an AI spending bubble, said on Tuesday that an upbeat revenue forecast delivered in October has only gotten brighter due to strong demand. In October, Nvidia had projected about half a trillion dollars of revenue from current and future data center chips by the end of 2026.
Investor focus this week will also turn to economic data, including business activity and jobs market reports due later in the week. A weaker-than-expected US Services PMI reading on Tuesday bolstered rate cut hopes.
“The fact that we’re getting actual real-time economic data certainly seems to be a tailwind for investors,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth. “That combined with excitement coming out of CES.”
With inputs from Bloomberg
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