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Abstract:Asian mainboards put in a patchy midweek performance with Wall St. s modest gains helping to mitigate some weak regional numbers
Asian Stocks Talking Points:
China stocks held gains despite news of a profit slump
The US Dollar was better bid as Treasury yields got up of the canvas
New Zealands reserve bank sounded more dovish than the markets had expected
Find out what retail foreign exchange investors make of your favorite currencys chances right now at the DailyFX Sentiment Page
Asia Pacific equity markets put in a mixed performance Wednesday. Doubts about global growth and trade still linger but a modestly better Wall Street tone in the previous session gave some regional mainboards a positive lead.
The S&P 500 managed its first gain in three days, with ten-year US Treasury yields bouncing modestly off its lows. Even so the bellwether Nikkei 225 was down 0.4%, but the Shanghai Composite and Hang Seng added 0.4% apiece by the middle of their afternoon. The ASX 200 faded, to be down 0.1%.
China market resilience came in the face of data showing the weakest slide in domestic industrial profits since late 2011. Profits slipped 14% on the year in the January-February period. Still Chinas Beige Book survey did show a pickup in activity, albeit with a big rise in debt.
The US Dollar made gains as investors looked to the Treasury market. The New Zealand Dollar wilted as its reserve bank left interest rates alone at record lows once more but hinted that they could yet go lower. This was a modest adjustment to its previous neutral bias.
Having held up reasonably well through the risk-appetite slips of recent weeks, NZD/USD has now retraced some of its gains.
For the moment the second Fibonnaci retracement of its 2019 rise seems to be holding. It comes in around 0.6797. However, the psychological 0.7000 point now looks like a most formidable barrier for the bulls.
Gold prices made initial gains as local stock market started soft but were modestly lower by the end of the day. Crude oil prices went the other way, having faded early on news of a US inventory gain only to rise through the session. Still, demand worries continue to cap this market.
Wednesday‘s remaining economic data schedule is a little sparse with only official US crude-oil inventory data likely to whet the markets’ appetite. There are plentiful European Central Bank speakers on tap, too. Vice President Luis De Guindos is on the roster as are Executive Board members Sabine Lautenschlager and Yves Mersch.
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In March, Canada's consumer price index increased by 0.6% compared to the previous month, surpassing the 0.3% growth seen earlier. In April, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand opted to maintain its official cash rate at 5.5 percent for the sixth consecutive meeting, emphasizing the ongoing need to address inflation fully. In March, the UK Consumer Price Index registered a slower-than-anticipated increase, reaching 3.2% in annual terms, down from the 3.4% rise observed in February. In March, UK...
The New Zealand central bank maintain its benchmark interest rate at 5.50% as expected during its previous meeting. While there was no surprise of the central bank paused rates, the less hawkish tone was a surprise as 23% of the market surveyed by Reuters predicted an interest rate hike. In February, the rate of consumer price growth in the United States picked up pace with the reading came in at 3.2%, surpassing expectations of 3.1% for underlying inflation.
New Zealand Dollar holds firm while risk-sensitive Australian Dollar falls overnight. RBNZ's inflation expectations survey in focus as the central bank’s rate decision nears. NZD/USD looks to retake the 0.7000 psychological level after bouncing from support
APAC traders look to close the week out on a bright note following Wall Street rebound. RBNZ rate hike bets continue to strengthen as economy recovers from Covid lockdowns. And, NZD/USD clings to 100-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) after overnight drop.