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Abstract:Regional stock markets had like many others looked forward to the prospect of lower US interest rates. Now that has apparently dimmed, a little rethink is necessary.
Asian Stocks Talking Points:
All major bourses were lower to start the week
Suspicions that US rates wont fall far after all did much of the damage
However, a widening spat between Japan and South Korea did not help
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Asia Pacific stocks were lower Monday with the re-pricing of interest rate expectations in the US weighing them down. That came about in turn thanks to strong employment data released at the end of last week, which saw market forecasts of two, quarter point cuts to the Fed funds target rate in the near future reduced to just one.
Global investors hope for more clarity on this crucial issue this week. They‘ll hear from numerous Federal Reserve luminaries including Chair Jerome Powell. He’ll testify before the House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday and the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday.
A modest local dampener on equity markets came from South Korea and Japan. A dispute between the two over wartime forced labor has expanded to the point where Japan imposed tighter restrictions last week on the export of high-tech materials used in displays and smartphones made in South Korea. The Kospi shed more than 1.5% with Samsung especially hard hit.
In Japan the Nikkei 225 dropped 1%, with Australias ASX 200 down by a similar amount. The Shanghai Composite fell 2.5%.
The US Dollar meanwhile rather enjoyed the Fed re-price. Bulls took it back to near three-week highs at the start of the session against major traded rivals, but it returned some of these gains as the Asian session wore on.
USDJPY has edged back up into the old trading range which formerly endured between May 31 and June 20.
Clearly however one daily-chart foray toward the range top has already failed and another one seems likely to, putting focus on the base at 107.82.
Crude oil prices went nowhere very much in Asian hours and DailyFX Senior Currency Strategist Ilya Spivak suspects the weeks action will crowd around that Powell testimony and the release of Federal Open Market Committee monetary policy meeting minutes from last month, which is coming up on Wednesday.
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The Japanese Yen (JPY) strengthened against the US Dollar (USD) on Thursday, boosted by stronger-than-expected Q2 GDP growth in Japan, raising hopes for a BoJ rate hike. Despite this, the USD/JPY pair found support from higher US Treasury yields, though gains may be capped by expectations of a Fed rate cut in September.
The Japanese Yen rose 0.7% against the US Dollar after BoJ Governor Kazuo Ueda hinted at potential rate hikes. This coincided with a recovery in Asian markets, aided by stronger Chinese stocks. With the July FOMC minutes already pointing to a September rate cut, the US Dollar might edge higher into the weekend.
The Australian Dollar (AUD) traded sideways against the US Dollar (USD) on Tuesday, staying just below the seven-month high of 0.6798 reached on Monday. The downside for the AUD/USD pair is expected to be limited due to differing policy outlooks between the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the US Federal Reserve. The RBA Minutes indicated that a rate cut is unlikely soon, and Governor Michele Bullock affirmed the central bank's readiness to raise rates again if necessary to combat inflation.
Bitcoin traded above $60,000 on Friday, gaining over 4% this week but staying within a $57,000 to $62,000 range for the past 15 days. On-chain data reveals mixed signals, with institutions accumulating while some large holders are selling. Inflows into US spot Bitcoin ETFs and potential volatility from ongoing Mt.Gox fund movements could impact Bitcoin's price in the coming days.