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Asian stocks rise on dovish Fed comments
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Bond market sell-off slows, concerns over fiscal health
persist
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Weak job openings data, Fed's dovish comments reinforce
rate cut
bets
By Gregor Stuart Hunter
SINGAPORE, Sept 4 (Reuters) - Asian stocks moved higher
in early trading on Thursday as dovish comments from Federal
Reserve officials soothed investor nerves at a time of
heightened concerns over global growth and a selloff in bond
markets.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
was up 0.5%, after U.S. stocks ended the
previous session with mild gains.
Australian shares advanced 0.7%, recovering from
their biggest one-day sell-off since April, while the Nikkei 225
opened up 1.2%.
Bucking the regional trend, Chinese stocks opened lower. The
Shanghai Composite fell 0.4% and was on track for a
third day of declines after a report in Bloomberg News that
financial regulators are preparing cooling measures for the
market.
Financial markets have started September in a downbeat
mood, with a sell-off in longer-dated bonds dousing investor
confidence ahead of critical U.S. non-farm payrolls on Friday.
An auction of 30-year Japanese government bonds later today will
test global debt markets' appetite for super-long fixed income.
Overnight, the selloff in bond markets slowed, but concerns
about the fiscal health of major economies from Japan to Britain
and the United States kept long-dated borrowing costs pinned
near multi-year highs.
Investors got a timely boost to sentiment after Federal
Reserve officials, including Governor Christopher Waller,
expressed support for rate cuts in the months ahead.
Furthermore, President Donald Trump's pick to fill an open
seat on the Federal Reserve Board, Stephen Miran, said he would
work to preserve the central bank's independence.
U.S. stock futures were up 0.1% as investors took
heart from the Fed's dovish comments, drawing buyers into
beaten-down equities.
"We got one or two days of weakness but the dip-buyers have
stepped in," said Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG in Sydney.
"Many people are looking for this weakness in September to be a
buying opportunity", with economic growth still resilient, he
added. "This is a good backdrop for equities."
Market bets of a rate cut at the Fed's meeting later this
month were also supported by weaker-than-expected job openings
data in the latest "JOLTS" report on Wednesday.
The Federal Reserve's "Beige Book" painted a mixed picture
of U.S. economic health, which appeared to underscore monetary
policymakers' concerns. Analysts at ING described the report as
quite "bleak" and noted that it was "littered with tariff
warnings on prices."
Traders are now pricing in a 96.6% probability of a cut to
interest rates at the Fed's September meeting, according to the
CME Group's FedWatch tool.
The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes
rose to 4.2129% compared with its U.S. close of 4.211% on
Wednesday. The two-year yield, which rises with
traders' expectations of higher Fed funds rates, touched 3.6166%
compared with a U.S. close of 3.612%.
The dollar slipped 0.1% against the yen to 147.98,
remaining within the trading range it has sat in since the
beginning of August.
The European single currency was flat at $1.1657,
while the dollar index, which tracks the greenback
against a basket of currencies of other major trading partners,
was unchanged at 98.153.
In commodities markets, Brent crude dipped 0.5% to
$67.29 a barrel.
Precious metal prices nudged lower, with spot gold
off 0.2% at $3552.49 per ounce after hitting a record on
Wednesday.