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Asian stock markets : https://tmsnrt.rs/2zpUAr4
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European stock futures, euro steady after political shock
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Dollar holds firm ahead of Fed meeting, U.S. CPI
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Oil prices stabilise after rally
By Wayne Cole
SYDNEY, June 11 (Reuters) - Asian stocks traded in a
narrow range on Tuesday, as investors pondered fresh political
uncertainty in European markets after right-wing gains in
elections and a snap poll in France revived concerns about the
cohesion of the bloc.
Moves were modest, with MSCI's broadest index of
Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dipping 0.4%
in thin trade, with Chinese blue chips off 0.7%.
Going the other way, Japan's Nikkei firmed 0.3% and
South Korea stocks rose 0.5%.
EUROSTOXX 50 futures also edged up 0.2%, steadying
after Monday's retreat, while FTSE futures rose 0.1%.
The euro, French stocks and government debt had been shaken
after investors assessed whether the right wing can repeat their
success in French elections and how much sway far-right parties
can have on the new European Union executive.
Bond yields rose across Europe, with the spread between
French and German debt widening notably, after an opinion poll
suggested the far-right National Rally could win the snap
election, albeit without a clear majority.
Elsewhere, markets gave a muted reaction to Apple's ( AAPL )
long-awaited AI strategy, which integrates "Apple Intelligence"
technology across a suite of apps. The iPhone maker's shares
were down 0.3% in after hours trade, having slipped 1.9% in
normal hours.
S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures both eased
0.1% in Asian trading, after edging higher on Monday.
The market has, so far, proven remarkably resilient to the
jump in U.S. yields that followed Friday's jobs report and the
pull back in expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts.
"We see diminished prospects for easing this year, and now
expect the first Fed cut only in November," analysts at JPMorgan
said.
"Equities seem to be ignoring the plethora of risks,
including politics, geopolitics, the narrow market concentration
and the surge in meme stock and crypto trading that may signal
froth," they added. "As such, we maintain a defensive tilt in
our model portfolio."
ONE CUT, OR TWO?
Futures imply 37 basis points of Fed easing for this year,
compared to 50 bps before the jobs report.
The Fed is considered certain to hold steady at its policy
meeting on Wednesday, with the focus on whether it keeps three
rate cuts in its "dot plot" projections for this year.
"We expect the dots to show two cuts in 2024, four cuts in
2025, three cuts in 2026 and a slight tick up in the longer-run
or neutral rate," said analysts at Goldman Sachs in a note.
"We think the leadership would prefer a two-cut baseline to
retain flexibility, but a one-cut baseline is a possible risk,
especially if core CPI surprises to the upside on Wednesday."
The consumer price index (CPI) is forecast to rise a slim
0.1% in May, but with the core up 0.3%.
In currency markets, the euro steadied around $1.0766
, after hitting a one-month low overnight at $1.0733.
It has lost about 1.1% in the past two sessions, undermined by
the U.S. jobs reports and political uncertainty.
The dollar was broadly supported at 157.17 yen and
just short of its May top of 157.715.
The weakness of the yen is one reason the Bank of Japan
(BoJ) might decide to taper its bond buying at a policy meeting
on Friday, as a step toward another rate hike.
Gold was just above one-month lows at $2,306 an ounce
, after getting whiplashed by the pullback in market
pricing for U.S. rate cuts.
Oil prices consolidated Monday's 3% rally, as various
investment banks tipped strong summer demand for fuel and
potential U.S. crude purchases for its petroleum reserve.
Markets are also awaiting monthly oil supply and demand data
from the U.S. Energy Information Administration and OPEC on
Tuesday, and the International Energy Agency on Wednesday.
Brent dipped 4 cents to $81.59 a barrel, while U.S.
crude was unchanged at $77.74 per barrel.