Asian stocks rise with the support of Japan’s rise and oil profits

Asian shares led by Japan have risen, after the central bank has reduced concerns about the market over its plans to get rid of its major belongings of the exchange cabinets on the Stock Exchange (ETFs). The “Nikai 225” index jumped 1.5%, to the Bank of Japan comments, which calmed the turmoil in the markets on Friday. The yen also took off. The shares in Australia and South Korea have recorded profits, while the Hong Kong stock exchange fell by 1%. As for the futures for Indian stocks, they have decreased slightly with investors who wounded the impact of the sharp increase in H-1B visa visa fees on the technological sector. The dollar index rose 0.1% to continue its profits for the fourth consecutive day. US Treasury bonds have also decreased with the rise of mortgage returns for ten years, one base point to 4.14%. Oil rose 0.5% after minor losses last week, while Silver has jumped to the highest levels since 2011. Support for the Japanese markets has been removed anxiety taxed by the Japanese stock market after the central bank revealed a long -term plan that stretches a century to gradually get rid of its large possessions of the traded boxes. Morale also improved after US President Donald Trump praised the progress of trade issues with China and announced that he would meet President Xi Jinping after a phone call between the two parties. Humin Lee, chief economist at Lombard Audier in Singapore, said the meeting ‘reinforced’ expectations of the continued commercial ceasefire between the United States and China, ‘the phone call between Trump and Shi holds a momentum to make more similarities during their upcoming meeting. Trump stressed that he would meet XI on the sidelines of the upcoming “Apec” summit and pointed out to progress in an agreement that enabled the continued work of the “Tech Talk” application in the United States. While the Chinese statement became more conservative, Shi expressed his confidence in Washington and Beijing’s ability to address differences. September contradicts the usual tendency. Wall Street ended the federal week by registering new record levels, supported by the expectations of further reduction in interest rates and improving corporate profits. “The discussion on bubbles has officially entered the market discourse – and if the” S&P 500 “index (S&P 500) is already in a bubble, is the question: to what extent will it continue?” He added that the increase in September violated the usual seasonal tendency of fluctuations. Evecor believes that there is a 25% possibility for bubbles scenario – the ‘S&P 500’ index reached by the end of 2026 9,000 points – compared to the primary scenario at 7.750 points. Vision ewes will not stop US stock momentum. Bloomberg’s strategic experts have seen low volatility rates in the markets, as well as the federal reduction of interest rates, mean that clouds associated with the Visa program will not disrupt US shares to new record levels. “For technology companies, it seems sufficient to exceed the sudden increase in visa fees, even if activated,” says Garfield Reynolds, AFIS leader of MLIV. Trump’s proposal on visas was US President Donald Trump on Friday for extensive reform of the “H-1B” Visa program, including the imposition of a request for a request of $ 100,000. This proposal has elicited the concerns of companies that have long relied on the program to attract global talents, especially in the California economy, which is dominated by the technological sector, where employers depend on programmers, databases and competent engineers. Also read: Trump launches special visas for the rich at a cost of up to $ 5 million. The move could add a new amount of uncertainty to the global markets, with the chances of the largest pressure on India and the 280 billion dollar information technology sector, which is already facing a slowdown in growth and political tensions between Premier Narendra Modi and Trampb. “It’s hard to ignore the idea that the move is only aimed at Moody and India,” said Tony Sikammour, an IG analyst in Sydney.