-
Cinema owners welcome back an old friend as Godzilla sequel unveiled
-
Peru candidate calls for vote annulment as count tightens
-
Trump says Iran talks may resume as Israel, Lebanon open direct track
-
Ekitike injury 'looks really bad', says concerned Slot
-
Atletico 'ready' for Champions League success at last: Simeone
-
Slot in the firing line as Liverpool blown away by PSG
-
Barcelona deserved to go through but must learn from KO: Flick
-
Konate fumes over Liverpool's rejected penalty in PSG defeat
-
Dembele hails PSG's ability to 'suffer' in win over Liverpool
-
Netflix boss Sarandos has 'constructive' talks with cinema owners
-
Atletico resist Barca to reach Champions League semis
-
Dembele sends PSG past wounded Liverpool into Champions League semis
-
England beat Spain in Women's World Cup qualifier
-
Pope walks in Augustine's footsteps as Algeria trip draws to an end
-
Lebanon, Israel agree to direct negotiations after Washington talks
-
Trump's Fed chair nominee to face Senate confirmation hearing next week
-
Israeli envoy says 'on the same side' with Lebanon after talks in US
-
Noor stars as Chennai keep Kolkata winless in IPL
-
Mascherano departs MLS club Inter Miami
-
Bayern clash to define Real's season, says Bellingham
-
Renault to cut up to 20% of engineers
-
Ukraine says Russian attacks kill seven, including child
-
Salah dropped, Isak starts Liverpool comeback mission against PSG
-
Gucci -- again -- drags down Kering's performance
-
Rolls-Royce unveils ultra-luxury limited series electric car
-
S.Africa returns stolen human remains, sacred carving to Zimbabwe
-
Paris engineer wins Picasso painting at charity auction
-
Harvey Weinstein rape retrial begins in New York
-
Lebanon, Israel start direct talks as Hezbollah launches new attacks
-
Italy shifts away from Israel, US over Mideast war
-
Direct Israel-Lebanon peace talks a 'historic opportunity': Rubio
-
Trump admin wants new Fed chair in place 'as soon as possible'
-
Lebanon, Israel start direct talks as Trump blockades Iran
-
Musk's father seeking Russian refuge for S.African farmers
-
Buoyant Bayern pledge to 'push through the pain' against Real
-
ECB chief insists won't abandon ship amid global turmoil
-
Lavrov blasts efforts to 'contain' Russia, China on Beijing visit
-
Iran nuclear programme 'set back' but not wiped out
-
Arteta urges Arsenal to play with 'pure fire' after damaging defeats
-
Czech govt draws ire with public media financing plan
-
US bank profits jump as execs see consumers surviving oil spike so far
-
IMF cuts 2026 global growth forecast on Mideast war
-
Iraola says now is 'right moment to step away' from Bournemouth
-
Dutch prosecutors urge long jail terms for Romanian helmet theft
-
American Kang preparing bid to buy Ligue 1 club Lyon
-
Bournemouth manager Iraola to leave at end of season
-
Amazon says to buy Globalstar to expand satellite network
-
IMF cuts eurozone growth forecast to 1.1%, warns of strong euro
-
Pope walks in Augustine's footsteps on Algeria trip marred by suicide attacks
-
Rice adds to Arsenal injury concerns ahead of Sporting clash
Gold soars towards $5,600 as Trump rattles sabre over Iran
Gold prices soared to a fresh record near $5,600 Thursday, while oil rallied after Donald Trump ramped up geopolitical tensions with his threatened military strike on Iran.
The surge in safe-haven precious metals also saw silver hit another peak and has also been helped by a softer dollar sparked by speculation that the US president is happy to see the world's reserve currency weaken.
An uneventful policy announcement by the Federal Reserve did little to inspire buying, although observers said traders are optimistic interest rates will come down as Trump prepares to name his pick as the next governor.
Bullion piled on more than $300 at one point to top $5,595 after Trump said Tehran needed to negotiate a deal over its nuclear programme, which the West believes is aimed at making an atomic bomb.
"Hopefully Iran will quickly 'Come to the Table' and negotiate a fair and equitable deal -- NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS -- one that is good for all parties. Time is running out, it is truly of the essence!" he wrote on his Truth Social platform.
"The next attack will be far worse! Don't make that happen again," he added, referring to US strikes against Iranian targets in June.
A US naval strike group Trump described as an "armada", led by aircraft carrier the USS Abraham Lincoln, is now in Middle East waters, with the president saying it was "ready, willing and able to rapidly fulfill its mission, with speed and violence, if necessary".
CNN said he was mulling an attack after nuclear talks failed to advance.
Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi warned on Wednesday that Tehran would respond immediately and forcefully to any US military operation -- adding that its forces have their "fingers on the trigger" -- but did not rule out a new nuclear deal.
- 'Inverse of confidence' -
Stephen Innes said the surge in gold indicated deeper structural concerns.
"After blowing through $5,500 in early Asia, bullion is no longer trading like a commodity. It is trading like a referendum. Not on inflation. Not on rates. On trust," he wrote.
"Gold is the inverse of confidence. When belief in policy coherence weakens, gold ceases to behave like a hedge and instead acts as an alternative. That is what we are watching now. This is not fear of recession. There is doubt about fiat stewardship."
Rising tensions sent oil prices up almost two percent -- with WTI at its highest since September and Brent at levels not seen since July -- amid supply worries.
On equity markets Hong Kong, Shanghai, Singapore and Seoul rose, while Tokyo was flat.
Sydney, Wellington, Taipei and Mumbai dropped. Manila sank as data showed the Philippines economy grew last year at its slowest non-pandemic rate since 2011.
Jakarta tanked eight percent, prompting a temporary halt and extending Wednesday's collapse that came after index compiler MSCI called on regulators to look into ownership concerns. Stocks later pared those losses to sit around three percent lower.
MSCI also said it would hold off adding Indonesian stocks to its indexes or increasing their weighting, while there are concerns it could announce a downgrade from emerging market to frontier market, which could spark an outflow of foreign capital.
"I think this sharp downward pressure may last one or two days," said Hans Kwee, a stock analyst at PasarDana. "It was yesterday and today; at most, tomorrow it starts to move sideways.
"Then next week the market should be more normal."
The dollar remained under pressure, even after Treasury Secretary Bessent told CNBC that "the US always has a strong dollar policy", a day after Trump appeared to welcome its recent weakness.
The Fed's policy meeting ended with few surprises as boss Jerome Powell said officials were keeping tabs on data.
But Matthias Scheiber and Rushabh Amin at Allspring Global Investments said attention was now on Trump's choice to take the helm when Powell steps down in May.
"The big focus will remain on the announcement of the new Fed chair, with the race wide open though a general expectation of someone more dovish to succeed Jerome Powell," they wrote in a commentary.
Hong Kong-listed property stocks surged on the back of a report saying Chinese leaders had rowed back on stringent measures aimed at reining in borrowing, which helped spark a chronic debt crisis in the country's real estate sector that is still weighing on the economy.
Troubled developers soared, with Country Garden up around 17 percent, Sunac rocketing 30 percent and Agile Group 15 percent higher.
- Key figures at around 0700 GMT -
Tokyo - Nikkei 225: FLAT at 53,375.60 (close)
Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: UP 0.3 percent at 27,895.12
Shanghai - Composite: UP 0.2 percent at 4,157.98 (close)
West Texas Intermediate: UP 1.9 percent at $64.38 per barrel
Brent North Sea Crude: UP 1.9 percent at $69.67 per barrel
Dollar/yen: DOWN at 153.08 yen from 153.38 yen on Wednesday
Euro/dollar: UP at $1.1985 from $1.1944
Pound/dollar: UP at $1.3837 from $1.3797
Euro/pound: UP at 86.62 pence from 86.56 pence
New York - Dow: FLAT at 49,015.60 (close)
London - FTSE 100: DOWN 0.5 percent at 10,154.43 (close)
M.A.Colin--AMWN