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Japan, South Korea Markets Hit Records 05/29 05:19

   Markets in Japan and South Korea hit fresh records as world shares mostly 
advanced Friday on expectations the U.S. and Iran will agree to extend the 
ceasefire in their war by 60 days.

   HONG KONG (AP) -- Markets in Japan and South Korea hit fresh records as 
world shares mostly advanced Friday on expectations the U.S. and Iran will 
agree to extend the ceasefire in their war by 60 days.

   Oil prices slipped, but remain above pre-war levels as the Strait of Hormuz 
remains largely closed. Analysts warned that the potential ceasefire extension 
should be viewed with caution, as it will take time for oil supplies to recover.

   U.S. futures edged 0.1% higher.

   In early European trading, Britain's FTSE 100 rose 0.2% to 10,446.42. 
Germany's DAX gained 0.3% to 25,157.61, while France's CAC 40 added 0.9% to 
8,262.90.

   In Asia, Tokyo's Nikkei 225 jumped 2.5% and ended at a record high close of 
66,329.50, as data released Friday showed that Tokyo's core inflation rate for 
May rose more slowly than economists expected.

   South Korea's Kospi surged 3.6% to 8,476.15, also at an all-time closing 
high, with technology companies powering the gains thanks to the global boom in 
artificial intelligence.

   Shares in Samsung Electronics, the country's leading company, rose 5.8%. SK 
Hynix, which has benefited greatly from the shift to AI, gained 1.9%.

   In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng added 0.7% to 25,182.39, while the Shanghai 
Composite index fell 0.7% to 4,068.57.

   Australia's S&P/ASX 200 was up 1.6% at 8,731.70.

   Taiwan's Taiex traded 2.5% higher. India's Sensex lost 0.5%.

   On Thursday, negotiators from the U.S. and Iran reached a tentative deal on 
extending their ceasefire and holding a new round of talks on Iran's nuclear 
program, a U.S. official said. Iran had not yet publicly confirmed the deal and 
the tentative agreement was still pending U.S. President Donald Trump's sign 
off.

   Brent crude, the international standard, slipped 0.1% early Friday to $92.58 
a barrel. It was trading around $70 per barrel in late February before the war 
began. Benchmark U.S. crude also lost 0.1%, to $88.81 per barrel.

   Investors are closely watching for a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. The 
U.S. official said the tentative accord makes it clear that Iran wouldn't be 
able to impose tolls on ships transiting the strait, while the U.S. would 
gradually lift its sea blockade on Iranian ports.

   "The oil market continues to edge lower amid growing optimism that the U.S. 
and Iran are moving toward a deal," ING commodities strategists Warren 
Patterson and Ewa Manthey wrote Friday. "A reopening of the strait would offer 
some immediate relief to the oil market with tankers leaving the Persian Gulf. 
However, the recovery is still uncertain."

   Shipowners may be reluctant to send vessels into the Persian Gulf, at least 
initially, over fears that the ceasefire could fail, they wrote. Also a 
recovery in oil and gas production would likely also be gradual rather than 
immediate.

   On Thursday, Wall Street pushed to more records with the benchmark S&P 500 
setting another all-time high, climbing 0.6% to 7,563.63. The Dow Jones 
Industrial Average added less than 0.1% to 50,668.97, and the technology-heavy 
Nasdaq composite gained 0.9% to 26,917.47.

   In other dealings early Friday, the U.S. dollar was trading at 159.28 
Japanese yen, up from 159.24 yen. The euro slipped to $1.1634 from $1.1651.

 
 
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