Asia markets rebound as focus shifts to Fed decision and tech earnings
![]()
SINGAPORE, April 29 โ Markets found their footing in Asian trading on Wednesday as worries โabout the Iran conflict and health of the AI sector eased, optimism over corporate earnings grew, and attention turned to the Federal Reserveโs decision due later.
MSCIโs broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan reversed earlier losses to โrise 0.2 per cent, as gains for stocks trading in Hong Kong steadied the index. Japanese markets were closed for a holiday. โ
S&P 500 e-mini futures edged up 0.2 per cent, while Brent crude rose 0.2 per cent to US$111.51 (RM440) per barrel as efforts to end the Iran conflict hit an impasse.
โFor us, earnings are the most important part of the story right now,โ said Kate Moore, chief investment officer at Citi Wealth. โQ1 earnings are tracking year-over-year growth and climbing,โ โshe said.
โAnalysts typically spend earnings season revising numbers down. This season, the opposite appears to be happening.โ Corporate America has shown resilience in the face of the Iran conflict: with slightly more than one-third of S&P 500 sectors having already reported profits, 81 per cent of companies have beaten estimates.
Earnings from US tech giants Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon and Meta Platforms, due later on Wednesday, will further test the AI-driven rally.
Tech shares took a hit on Tuesday after The Wall Street Journal reported that AI heavyweight OpenAI โhad missed internal targets for weekly users and revenue, raising concerns over the ChatGPT parentโs ability to support its massive spending on โ data centres.
The report weighed on shares of Oracle and CoreWeave on Wall โ Street on Tuesday, with the S&P 500 sliding 0.5 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite falling โ 0.9 per cent as investors also assessed the impasse in โ Iran.
US President Donald Trump is โ unhappy with the latest proposal from Tehran as he wants nuclear issues dealt with from the outset, a US official said. The Journal also reported on Tuesday, citing US officials, that Trump had instructed aides to prepare for an extended blockade of Iran.
Market attention will turn โ later on Wednesday to the outcome of the Federal Reserveโs April meeting, which will be Jerome Powellโs last as Fed chair. Traders believe a hold is a certainty. Fed funds futures are pricing an implied 100 per cent probability the US central bank will maintain rates, with no policy changes expected until late in 2027, according to the CME Groupโs FedWatch tool.
โGiven the challenging war-impacted inflation environment, it wonโt cost much for the Fed to adopt a hawkish tilt; while remaining in a wait-and-see mode,โ analysts from ING wrote in a research report.
โThere โ will also be questions on the incoming Kevin Warsh and Powellโs intention to stay or go.โ The yield on the US 10-year Treasury bond was up 0.8 basis point at 4.344 per cent, while the US dollar index, which measures the โ greenbackโs strength against a basket of six currencies, edged up 0.1 per cent to 98.71, rising for a second consecutive day. Markets also digested the surprise exit โ of the United โ Arab Emirates from OPEC, though the rest of the oil producer alliance is expected to stick together.
โOn any other given day, this news may have seen โthe Brent price move down US$5 to US$6 off the bat, given the UAE accounts โfor around 10 per cent of OPEC output,โ said Chris Weston, head of โresearch at Pepperstone Group Ltd in Melbourne.
โHowever, with the UAEโs production facilities currently close to โcapacity, it is perhaps no surprise that โBrent front-month futures quickly erased the initial drop.โ
Gold was down 0.2 per cent at US$4,583.40. In cryptocurrency markets, bitcoin gained 1.1 per cent at US$77,296.62 while ether rallied1.5 per cent at US$2,331.23. โ Reuters