A person stands in front of an electronic stock board showing Japan's Nikkei index at a securities firm Thursday, April 23, 2026, in Tokyo.  (Photo | AP)
World

Asian stocks retreat, oil tops USD 100 despite fresh records on Wall Street

A growing sense of unease over prospects for an end to the Iran war, which is in its eighth week, is weighing on investor sentiment even after US President Donald Trump extended a ceasefire.

Associated Press

HONG KONG: Stocks retreated in Asia on Thursday after an initial jump that pushed Japan's Nikkei 225 index above 60,000 for the first time, while oil prices gained as investors reacted to shaky prospects for more talks on ending the war with Iran.

US futures also fell back after indexes on Wall Street rallied to records a day earlier, helped by strong corporate earnings.

Markets in Japan and South Korea briefly touched new records, driven by buying of tech shares. Tokyo's Nikkei 225 lost 1.5% to 58,707.60 after climbing to 60,013.98.

South Korea's Kospi was 0.1% lower at 6,414.57, giving up earlier gains after briefly surpassing 6,500. The government reported a better-than-expected 1.7% annual economic growth rate for the January-March quarter, boosted by strong exports, particularly of computer chips used in the artificial intelligence boom.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng shed 1.1% to 25,865.88, while the Shanghai Composite index fell 0.8% to 4,073.71.

Australia's S&P/ASX 200 declined 0.8% to 8,770.70.

Taiwan's Taiex sank 1.6% and the Sensex in India lost 0.6%.

A growing sense of unease over prospects for an end to the Iran war, which is in its eighth week, is weighing on investor sentiment even after US President Donald Trump extended a ceasefire. It's unclear whether and when another round of peace talks will take place.

Iran fired on three ships in the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday after the US began imposing a sea blockade of Iranian ports last week, and Trump said the US would continue its blockade of Iranian ports.

Maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, where roughly a fifth of the world's oil normally passed before the war, is still largely halted and the likelihood of its reopening dimmed after Iran's Revolutionary Guard seized two of the three ships that were attacked.

Global energy prices have surged on the Iran war energy shock. Brent crude, the international standard, was 1.5% higher early Thursday at USD 103.39 per barrel. It was around USD 70 a barrel before the Iran war began in late February.

Benchmark US crude was up 1.8% to USD 94.66 per barrel.

As hopes for a resolution between the U.S. and Iran faded and peace talks stalled, the oil market "is having to reprice expectations," ING Bank strategists Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey said in a research note.

"As hopes fade, the reality of the supply disruption will set in, leaving further upside for prices," they said. "If no progress is made, the market will become increasingly numb to the noise and headlines that have dictated price action recently."

Wall Street set more records Wednesday following a series of strong corporate earnings and an extension of the Iran war ceasefire, with the benchmark S&P 500 jumping 1% to 7,137.90, eclipsing its previous record high set on Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.7% to 49,490.03, while the Nasdaq composite also set a record, gaining 1.6% to 24,657.57.

Shares of GE Vernova jumped 13.7% after the company reported stronger-than-expected quarterly profits. The energy equipment maker is also benefiting from the AI boom with robust equipment orders including for data centers. Boeing gained 5.5%, and Philip Morris International was up 7%, also following better-than-expected results.

In other dealings early Thursday, gold and silver prices fell. Gold prices dropped 0.6% to USD 4,722.70 per ounce. Silver prices lost 2.3% to USD 76.17 an ounce.

The US dollar rose to 159.53 Japanese yen from 159.48 yen. The euro was trading at USD 1.1696, down from USD 1.1705.

LIVE | Assembly elections: 17.69% voter turnout by 9 am in TN; EVM glitches disrupt polling in Bengal

80% challenge: Why Tamil Nadu needs historic turnout just to match its 2021 numbers

'BJP agent', 'go back' slogans greet Humayun Kabir in Murshidabad as he slams TMC for 'poaching candidates'

'Why have an election?': Sibal slams EC on voter 'disenfranchisement' in West Bengal

Voting underway for Baramati, Rahuri assembly bypolls in Maharashtra

SCROLL FOR NEXT