(Updates prices ahead of European markets open)
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U.S. deal with UK is first since Trump's tariff pause
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U.S. officials to meet with Chinese negotiators on
Saturday
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Bitcoin leaps to highest since January; gold falls for
third day
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Chip shares rise in Japan, Taiwan; China stocks struggle
By Kevin Buckland
TOKYO, May 9 (Reuters) - Stocks surged in Japan and
Taiwan on Friday after a U.S. trade deal with Britain fuelled
guarded optimism for progress in tariff talks with other
countries.
Bitcoin soared to the highest since January and U.S. crude
ticked up after a more than 3% surge on Thursday, when President
Donald Trump announced the agreement with British Prime Minister
Keir Starmer - the first in the month since Trump started a
90-day pause on trade tariffs to allow room for negotiations.
At the same time, concerns that the limited trade agreement
with London may not provide much of a blueprint for additional
deals cooled hopes around the outcome of Sino-U.S. trade talks
set for Saturday in Switzerland.
Mainland blue chips eased 0.1%, while Hong Kong's
Hang Seng rose 0.3% after struggling for direction during
the session.
Japan's Nikkei soared 1.7% and Taiwan's equity
benchmark advanced 1.8%, with technology shares the
strongest performing sector.
Australian stocks rose 0.5% and Singapore's Straits
Times Index added 0.8%.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside
Japan gained 0.4%.
"The deal between the U.S. and UK was more style over
substance," said Kyle Rodda, a senior financial markets analyst
at Capital.com.
"However, it feeds the narrative that the U.S. is looking to
bang out rapid-fire trade deals and reduce tariffs - at the
margins - and other trade barriers," Rodda said.
"Constructive language and statements of intent will likely
be enough to drive stocks higher off the back of the U.S.-China
trade talks."
Trump pushed back against seeing the UK deal as a template
for other negotiations.
The "general terms" agreement leaves in place a 10% tariff
on goods imported from the UK but lowers prohibitive U.S. duties
on UK car exports. Britain agreed to lower its tariffs to 1.8%
from 5.1% and provide greater access to U.S. goods.
Last week, Trump said he has "potential" trade deals with
India, South Korea and Japan.
NYMEX U.S. crude ticked up 0.3% to $60.25 per barrel
on Friday, building on the previous day's 3.2% surge. Brent
crude added 0.3% to $63.18 per barrel, following
Thursday's 2.8% rally.
The U.S. dollar index, which measures the currency
against six major peers, edged to a one-month peak at 100.86.
The euro sagged to a one-month trough at $1.1197,
and sterling slipped to a three-week low of $1.3213.
The yen dipped to a one-month low of 146.185 per
dollar, after a 1.5% tumble on Thursday.
Higher U.S. Treasury yields helped support the greenback,
with the 10-year yield steady at 4.3667% following
Thursday's 10-basis point jump as demand for the safety of bonds
ebbed.
Bitcoin was also buoyed by the improvement in market
sentiment, rising to the highest since January 31 at
$103,909.17, and closing the distance with the all-time high
from January 20 at $109,071.86.
Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick no longer sees risk
sentiment as the main driver for the world's biggest
cryptocurrency.
"It is now all about flows, and flows are coming in many
forms," said Kendrick, the bank's global head of digital assets
research, pointing to an influx of cash into bitcoin ETFs, as
well as buying by so-called whales.
"I think a fresh all-time high for bitcoin is coming soon,"
he said. "I apologise that my $120,000 Q2 target may be too
low."