FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

Japanese Stocks Up Marginally on Friday's Opening Session Ahead of US-Iran Talks

-- Japanese shares moved higher at the start of Friday's trading session, although investor sentiment remained guarded due to an unstable ceasefire in the Middle East just before scheduled US-Iran negotiations over the weekend.

The Nikkei 225 rose 0.7%, or 370.5 points, to 56,265.77 at the opening bell.

Crude oil prices saw a roughly 1% increase, climbing to just under $97 per barrel, following President Donald Trump's warning to Iran about fees imposed on vessels transiting the strategically critical but largely closed Strait of Hormuz.

Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has agreed to engage in direct talks with Lebanon, primarily aimed at disarming Hezbollah, which is aligned with Tehran, according to various reports.

In economic data, the U.S. recorded a slower expansion in the last quarter of 2025 than earlier estimated, while the Asian Development Bank warned that even with stable oil prices, the Middle East conflict's ripple effects across manufacturing and tourism would likely slow Asia's economic growth.

The ADB projects that advanced economies in Asia and the Pacific will see growth ease from 2.5% last year to 2.2% in 2026, driven by deceleration in Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, and Taiwan, with inflation in developing Asia expected to accelerate to 3.6% this year from 3% in 2025, primarily due to higher energy costs.

Related Articles

Asia

PolyNovo Appoints Chief Scientific Officer

PolyNovo (ASX:PNV) appointed Marthe D'Ombrain as chief scientific officer, effective June 1, according to a Wednesday filing with the Australian bourse.D'Ombrain most recently served as executive director and head of global research innovation at CSL (ASX:CSL), the filing added.

$ASX:CSL$ASX:PNV
Asia

West African Resources Gold Project Deal With Burkina Faso Bolsters Operational Security, Says Euroz Hartleys

West African Resources' (ASX:WAF) Burkina Faso-based Kiaka Gold project, which saw the state's equity interest increase by a further 25%, represents stronger political alignment and operating security for the company, Euroz Hartleys said in a note on Tuesday.Burkina Faso's state mining entity has now boosted government ownership of the project to 40% after acquiring the additional stake share for AU$175 million. This has reduced West African Resources' holding to 60%.Alignment with government reduces the risk of licensing and operational disruption, marking a key driver for the gold producer. The strengthened relationship could also "create opportunities for deeper collaboration," the investment firm added.The brokerage lowered its net present value estimates for the Kiaka project to AU$2.3 billion from AU$3.08 billion following the company's reduced stake.Euroz Hartleys maintained a speculative buy rating but lowered price target to AU$5.50 from AU$5.70, reflecting the dilution from the reduced Kiaka interest.

$ASX:WAF
Asia

BHP Group Reports 7% Decline in Fiscal Q3 Copper Production

BHP Group (ASX:BHP) reported fiscal third-quarter copper production of 476,800 tonnes, down 7% from a year earlier, according to a Wednesday filing with the Australian bourse.Iron ore output for the March quarter was 62.8 million tonnes, an increase of 2% from the year-ago period, per the filing.The company said its fiscal 2026 copper production is now expected to be in the upper half of its 1.9 million to 2 million tonnes guidance range. It also maintained its iron ore output guidance at 258 million to 269 million tonnes for the fiscal year.

$ASX:BHP