Asian markets inch higher as Wall Street hits new records

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Asian shares rose Friday as worries receded the United States and Iran might be stepping closer to the edge of war, and U.S. indexes hit records.

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225












NIK, +0.23%










  edged up 0.2% in morning trading while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index












HSI, +0.06%










  was up 0.1%. The Shanghai Composite












SHCOMP, -0.26%










  slipped 0.3% and the smaller-cap Shenzhen Composite












399106, -0.22%










  inched down 0.2%. South Korea’s Kospi












180721, +0.40%










  gained 0.5%, and benchmark indexes in Taiwan












Y9999, +0.33%










 , Singapore












STI, +0.14%










 , Malaysia












FBMKLCI, -0.27%










  and Indonesia












JAKIDX, +0.02%










  rose. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200












XJO, +0.77%










  advanced 0.7%.

Among individual stocks, convenience-store chain FamilyMart












8028, +2.19%










  rose in Tokyo trading ahead of its quarterly earnings report Friday. Robotics maker Fanuc












6954, +2.35%










  and Fujifilm












4901, +1.87%










  also gained, while Fast Retailing












9983, -3.12%










  fell after cutting its outlook due to slower sales at its Uniqlo stores. Tencent












700, +1.79%










  and Sunny Optical












2382, +1.42%










  gained in Hong Kong while PetroChina












857, -2.93%










  and CNOOC












883, -1.75%










  fell as oil prices inched back down. Hyundai Motor












005380, +1.79%










  advanced in South Korea, and Apple












AAPL, +2.12%










  component maker Largan Precision












3008, +4.01%










  surged in Taiwan. In Australia, Oil Search Ltd.












OSH, +1.80%










  and Commonwealth Bank












CBA, +1.15%










  rose.

On Wall Street, money flowed into riskier investments, such as technology stocks, and trickled out of traditional hiding spots for investors when they’re nervous, such as gold. A measure of fear in the stock market had its largest drop in a week.

Stocks have been rallying after investors took comments from President Donald Trump and Iranian officials to mean no military escalation is imminent in their tense conflict. Markets had tumbled on the threat of war after the United States killed a top Iranian general in a drone strike.

The S&P 500












SPX, +0.67%










  rose 21.65 points, or 0.7%, to 3,274.70 and surpassed its record set last week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average












DJIA, +0.74%










  climbed 211.81 points, or 0.7%, to 28,956.90, and the Nasdaq composite












COMP, +0.81%










  rose 74.18, or 0.8%, to 9,203.43. Both also hit records.

Diminishing worries about a U.S.-Iran war put more of the market’s focus on the economy, corporate profits and other inputs that directly affect stock prices.

“The market is in pretty solid shape,” said Matt Hanna, portfolio manager at Summit Global Investments. “We could see some volatility in the beginning of 2020” following a well-worn path of choppy first halves for stocks during presidential election years, “but we don’t see any sort of recession on the horizon.”

Across markets, worries about a recession have faded since last year as central banks cut interest rates and pumped stimulus into the global economy. The United States and China also moved toward an interim deal in their trade war. China confirmed on Thursday that its chief envoy in tariff talks with Washington will visit next week to sign their “Phase 1” trade deal.

“Risk appetite continues to improve as investors judged the U.S.-Iran tensions to not be as concerning as thought while focusing on the upcoming leads including U.S.-China trade and a potential payrolls surprise into the end of week,” said Jingyi Pan, market strategist at IG in Singapore.

The spotlight will move next to Friday’s labor report, and economists expect it to show employers added 160,000 jobs last month. They also forecast the unemployment rate to hold at its low level of 3.5%. The numbers are key because a strong job market has been propping up the economy and allowing U.S. households to continue to spend, even as manufacturing weakens due to tariffs and trade wars.

Benchmark U.S. crude












CLG20, -0.34%










  fell 13 cents to $59.43 a barrel. It slipped 5 cents to $59.56 a barrel on Thursday. Brent crude












BRNH20, -0.31%










 , the international standard, fell 15 cents to $65.22 a barrel.

The dollar












USDJPY, +0.02%










  rose to 109.53 Japanese yen from 109.36 yen on Thursday.

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