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World stocks are mixed and oil prices slip after Treasury yields ease

Workers clean the glass window of a building in front of an electronic stock board showing Japan's TOPIX index at a securities firm Friday, May 23, 2025, in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Key Points

  • Asian stocks rallied after Treasury yields eased, with the 10-year note falling to 4.52% and the two-year to 3.98% amid debt-market concerns.
  • Oil prices slipped about 51 cents on both U.S. and Brent benchmarks on expectations that OPEC+ may agree to another output boost.
  • Tokyo’s Nikkei jumped 0.8% following a 3.5% core inflation print, the highest since early 2023, raising bets on a Bank of Japan rate hike despite trade-war headwinds.
  • Wall Street closed mixed, with the S&P 500 dipping slightly and the Nasdaq up 0.3% led by tech gains in Alphabet and Nvidia, while solar and health-care stocks fell on new tax and Medicare policy shifts.
  • MarketBeat previews top five stocks to own in June.

HONG KONG (AP) — World shares were mixed on Friday as U.S. Treasury yields eased after a rocky week due to worries in the bond market over mounting U.S. government debt.

The yield of the 10-year Treasury shed 0.8% to 4.52% while the two-year yield, which more closely tracks expectations for action by the Federal Reserve, slipped 0.3% to 3.99%.

Oil prices dropped on expectations that the OPEC+ group of oil exporters may decide on another increase in output at their next meeting.

U.S. benchmark crude oil fell 21 cents to $60.99 per barrel while Brent crude, the international standard, gave up 22 cents to $64.23 per barrel.

In share trading, Germany's DAX gained 0.1% to 24,019.22, while the CAC 40 in Paris slipped 0.5% to 7,825.09. The FTSE 100 added 0.1% to 8,743.69.

The futures for the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged slightly lower.

In other share trading, Tokyo's Nikkei 225 gained 0.5% to 37,160.47 after the government reported a core inflation rate of 3.5% in April, the highest since early 2023. Core inflation excludes volatile food and energy prices.

The surge in prices has increased the likelihood that the Bank of Japan might raise its benchmark interest rate at its next policy meeting, analysts said.

But uncertainty over U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff hikes will limit what the BOJ can do, given recent signs of weakness in the economy, Min Joo Kang of ING Economics said in a report.

He added that “with US tariffs likely to impact manufacturing and exports negatively throughout this year, the BOJ’s policy changes are likely to be gradual.”

Hong Kong's Hang Seng picked up 0.2% to 23,601.26, while the Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.9% to 3,348.37.

Seoul's Kospi retreated 0.1% to 2,592.09 and the S&P/ASX 200 in Australia gained 0.2% to 8,360.90.

On Thursday, stocks drifted to a mixed close on Wall Street.

The S&P 500 slipped less than 0.1% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.35 points. The Nasdaq composite rose 0.3%.

The majority of stocks within the S&P 500 lost ground, but gains for technology companies with outsized values offset those losses. Google’s parent Alphabet jumped 1.4% and Nvidia rose 0.8%.

Treasury yields held a bit steadier after the House of Representatives approved a bill that would cut taxes and could add trillions of dollars to the U.S. debt.

The House’s multitrillion-dollar spending bill, which aims to extend some $4.5 trillion in tax breaks from Trump’s first term while adding others, is expected to be amended when it gets to the Senate for a vote.

The legislation includes a speedier rollback of production tax credits for clean electricity projects, which sent shares of solar companies tumbling. Sunrun dropped 37.1%, Enphase Energy fell 19.6% and First Solar slid 4.3%.

In economic updates, the number of Americans filing unemployment claims last week fell slightly. The broader employment market has remained strong, though businesses remain worried about the economic uncertainty amid a trade war.

In other dealings early Friday, the U.S. dollar slipped to 143.21 Japanese yen from 144.01 yen. The euro rose to $1.1348 from $1.1279.

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