* The BOJ voted 7-1 to raise its benchmark policy rate to 1%
* Oil fell 2.2% to a three-month low above $81 a barrel
* Nvidia ( NVDA ) sold $25 billion of bonds
(Updates prices)
By Amanda Cooper and Alun John
LONDON, June 16 (Reuters) - Global stocks edged higher on
Tuesday after a rally the day before on news of a U.S.-Iran
peace framework, while the dollar held firm against the yen
after the Bank of Japan raised rates to a 31-year high.
Markets settled into a more measured tone on Gulf developments
as the initial excitement over the preliminary agreement between
Washington and Tehran began to fade.
Technology stocks got a lift as investors took heart from
SpaceX's blockbuster IPO late last week, which pushed
its shares up nearly 20% on Monday, taking the space exploration
company's market value past the $2 trillion mark. They were up
another 10.5% in premarket trading on Tuesday.
Separately, the company said it would buy Anysphere, the
software firm behind the popular AI coding agent Cursor, for $60
billion, in a bid to ramp up its presence in the enterprise AI
market.
Nasdaq futures rose 0.3%, while S&P 500 e-mini futures
edged up 0.1%.
The Nikkei 225 hit the 70,000 mark for the first time
after the Japanese central bank voted 7-1 to raise its benchmark
policy rate to 1%, a level last seen in 1995. Against the
dollar, the yen was flat at 160.31.
In Europe, the STOXX 600 rose 0.4% to hover near
Monday's record high.
Nvidia ( NVDA ), the world's most valuable maker of AI
chips, surprised investors by tapping the bond markets for $25
billion. The company said the cash would be used for general
corporate purposes and the debt sale was to establish a liquid
benchmark for future issuance. Nvidia ( NVDA ) shares were a touch lower
in premarket trading.
"The reality is we're one step further from worst-case
scenarios, and we're one step closer to seeing the codification
of the optimism of the market," said Mitch Reznick, group head
of fixed income at Federated Hermes.
"The key thing is to what extent we have systemic inflation,
how far it has permeated the economy, and the effect on the
consumer."
Oil slid another 2.2% to a three-month low just above $81 a
barrel, even though shippers in Asia and Europe said rebuilding
confidence in resuming transit through the Strait of Hormuz
could take weeks.
Oil consumers will likely scramble to restock inventories
depleted over the past weeks of war, meaning prices may not have
much room to fall in the near term, according to ING strategist
Warren Patterson.
U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement of a deal with Iran
drew initial investor relief on Monday, but it also puts
Washington on a collision course with Israel.
"While it is an important diplomatic breakthrough that
should remove a key source of market volatility, the durability
of the deal is likely to be tested in the future," Westpac
analysts wrote in a research note. "Many sticking points,
including the fate of Iran's nuclear programme, were left to be
resolved in subsequent negotiations."
The dollar index, which tracks the U.S. currency against
six others, was steady around 99.6. The euro rose 0.1% to
$1.1605, as did the pound, which traded at $1.342, with
two days to go before a Bank of England meeting that is unlikely
to yield any change in monetary policy.
The Australian dollar was little changed at $0.707 after
the Reserve Bank of Australia kept interest rates on hold as
expected.
The yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury note fell 2.6
basis points to 4.44%, while gold, which is also
sensitive to U.S. interest rate expectations, rose 0.7% to
$4,336 an ounce.
(Additional reporting by Gregor Stuart Hunter in Singapore;
Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Jacqueline Wong)