financetom
World
financetom
/
World
/
Asian shares fall, long-dated Treasuries set for worst week in a year
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
Asian shares fall, long-dated Treasuries set for worst week in a year
Dec 12, 2024 6:54 PM

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Asia shares fell on Friday as a strong dollar kept risk sentiment fragile, while longer-dated Treasury yields are heading for their biggest weekly rise this year as expectations for deep U.S. rate cuts in 2025 recede.

A top level meeting in Beijing pledged to increase debt and boost consumption but failed to boost Chinese equity markets. Policymakers are girding for more trade tensions with the U.S. as Donald Trump's return to power approaches.

It has been a week of rate cuts from Switzerland, Canada and the European Central Bank, which had rate differentials working in the favour of the U.S. dollar.

The other main point of the week has been the rise in long-term treasury yields. Markets are still confident of a cut from the Federal Reserve next week but suspect it will sound cautious about next year. Futures imply little chance of a move in January, with just two more easings priced in to 3.8% by end-2025.

Thirty-year yields have jumped 22 basis points so far this week, their biggest since October 2023.

In contrast, rates in Europe are seen at 1.75% compared with 3% currently, while those for Canada are expected to fall from 3.25% to 2.7% by then.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slipped 0.5% in Friday morning trade. Japan's Nikkei fell 1% but is still on track for a weekly gain of 0.9%.

China's blue chips dropped 0.7% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng lost 1.2% after the Central Economic Work Conference did not offer details on new stimulus measures. A subindex of Chinese property firms listed in Hong Kong slid 2.6%.

Jian Chang, chief China economist at Barclays, said the CEWC likely disappointed markets as a Dec. 9 Politburo statement had raised hopes of more aggressive easing.

"We maintain our view that incremental and reactive policy is more likely than pre-emptive and 'bazooka' policy," he said.

On Wall Street, stocks closed lower overnight as some investors booked profits from the Nasdaq's relentless run to record highs. That said, Nasdaq futures rose 0.4% in Asia.

Data on U.S. producer prices came out a little hotter than expected in November at 0.4% but that was due to a 50% jump in egg prices. The core reading was softer and led Goldman Sachs to lower their forecast for the Fed's prefered gauge of inflation - the core personal consumption expenditures price index due next week - to a monthly rise of 0.13%.

In the foreign exchange market, the dollar is on track for a weekly jump of 1% against its peers. [FRX/]

It gained 1.8% on the Japanese yen this week as markets scaled back the chance of a rate hike from the Bank of Japan next week to just 22%. Sources said the BOJ is leaning towards keeping rates steady..

The dollar also rose 1.6% on the swiss franc to 0.8919, just within a whisker of a five-month high of 0.8957, after the Swiss National Bank surprised economists by cutting by 50 basis points.

Treasuries were steady on Friday but headed for heavy weekly losses across the curve. The two-year yield rose 9 basis points to 4.1906%, while the ten-year benchmark yield jumped 17 bps to 4.3219%.

Oil prices edged lower on Friday, but were set for decent weekly gains after the European Union agreed to new round of sanctions threatening Russian oil flows. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) eased 0.1% to $69.95 a barrel and is up 4% this week. [O/R]

Gold gained 2% this week to $2,690.21 per ounce, still some distance from its record of $2,790.

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
CANADA STOCKS-Toronto market ends lower as energy extends its losing streak
CANADA STOCKS-Toronto market ends lower as energy extends its losing streak
Sep 11, 2024
* TSX ends down 0.1% at 23,003.09 * Energy falls for seventh straight day * Oil settles at lowest since December 2021 * Materials group gains 1.4% (Updates at market close) By Fergal Smith Sept 10 (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index fell on Tuesday as a drop in oil prices weighed on energy shares, but the move was limited...
GLOBAL MARKETS-S&P 500, Nasdaq rise, crude slides as CPI awaits
GLOBAL MARKETS-S&P 500, Nasdaq rise, crude slides as CPI awaits
Sep 11, 2024
* Stocks mixed as economic worries meet rate cut hopes * CPI report on tap * Banks under pressure after Barr's bank capital plan revisions * JPMorgan Chase's ( JPM ) interest income warning further rattles sector * Oil dips as OPEC+ lowers demand forecast (Updates to 16:02 EDT) By Stephen Culp NEW YORK, Sept 10 (Reuters) - The S&P...
EMERGING MARKETS-Brazil, Mexico lead declines among Latam FX as commodity prices weaken
EMERGING MARKETS-Brazil, Mexico lead declines among Latam FX as commodity prices weaken
Sep 11, 2024
* Brazilian inflation slips slightly in August * Brazil's Azul jumps after issuing FY net rev forecast * Mexican peso passes 20 per dollar level * Latam stocks down 1.2%, FX slips 1% (Updated at 1950 GMT) By Johann M Cherian and Lisa Pauline Mattackal Sept 10 (Reuters) - Most currencies and equity markets in resources-rich Latin America lost ground...
Morning Bid: Disinflation dynamics deepen
Morning Bid: Disinflation dynamics deepen
Sep 11, 2024
(Reuters) - A look at the day ahead in Asian markets. The slide in oil and commodity prices is garnering more attention as investors await Wednesday's U.S. consumer price inflation figures, the last major economic data point before the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision next week. The question for investors is whether this should be taken as a positive 'risk...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved