By Kevin Buckland
TOKYO, Jan 15 (Reuters) – Oil prices retreated from multi-month highs on Thursday and safe-haven gold eased back from a record peak after U.S. President Donald Trump calmed market anxiety about potential U.S. military action against Iran.
A selloff in tech stocks extended into Asian trading, after further declines on Wall Street as investors rotated out of high-flying chip- and artificial intelligence-related names, looking for bargains in other parts of the market.
Currencies paused for breath after the yen dropped to its weakest since July 2024 against the U.S. dollar overnight and then bounced back sharply amid warnings of possible intervention by Japanese authorities.
Japanese bond yields eased back from record peaks following a spike driven by speculation – which was later confirmed – that the government will call snap elections, a scenario expected to lead to bigger fiscal stimulus.
Brent crude futures dropped 2.4% to $64.94, and Nymex futures also sank 2.4% to $60.51, from as high as $66.82 and $62.36, respectively, in the previous session.
Trump said on Wednesday afternoon that he had been told that killings in Iran’s crackdown on nationwide protests were subsiding and he believed there was currently no plan for large-scale executions.
Gold fell 0.5% to around $4,598 per ounce. On Wednesday, it reached an unprecedented $4,642.72.
Stocks in Asia were mixed, but tech shares encountered more selling.
In Japan, the tech-heavy Nikkei eased 0.9% after hitting an all-time peak in the previous session, but the broader Topix extended its own record high on Thursday with a 0.4% advance.
Taiwan’s TAIEX sank 0.5%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slipped 0.4%, with tech shares weighing.
Mainland Chinese blue chips were flat, while South Korea’s KOSPI added 0.3% to a fresh record high. The Bank of Korea left interest rates unchanged on Thursday, as economists had predicted, and signalled an end to its current easing cycle.
S&P 500 E-mini futures were off 0.1%, after the cash index sank 0.5% overnight. The tech-focused Nasdaq Composite dropped 1%.
“There’s a rotation playing out on Wall Street that’s ultimately weighing on indices but indicates that the internals of the market are holding up reasonably well,” said Kyle Rodda, an analyst at Capital.com.
“The strength in cyclicals, in no small part due to the positive outlook for the U.S. economy, is propping up stocks and providing constructive signals to market participants of broadening market strength.”
The U.S. dollar was steady against its major peers on Thursday, with the dollar index flat at 99.107.
