Asian Stock Markets
Asian shares held firm near three-week highs on Tuesday as U.S.
borrowing costs eased ahead of Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s
awaited first congressional testimony later in the day.
Japan’s Nikkei rose
1.1 percent to three-week highs while MSCI’s broadest index of
Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan also hit a three-week high before
giving up gains on profit-taking in Chinese shares.
On Wall Street, the S&P 500 advanced 1.18 percent on Monday helped by a fall in U.S. bond yields.[.N]
The
10-year U.S. Treasuries yield eased to 2.864 percent, dropping further
from its four-year peak of 2.957 percent touched on Feb. 21, driven by
month-end buying as well as position adjustments ahead of Powell’s
testimony.
Powell’s debut appearance is seen as critical
for financial markets at a time when many investors are nervous about
the Fed’s policy normalization following years of stimulus after the
financial crisis almost a decade ago.
Many investors
expect the Fed to raise interest rates three times this year, with some
pundits predicting four, if U.S. inflation starts to take off,
especially as growth is set to get another boost from the Trump
administration’s tax cuts and spending plans.
Yet,
there are worries higher dollar bond yields could prompt investors to
shift funds to bonds from riskier assets, especially when the valuation
of the world’s stocks are quite expensive even after their sell-off
earlier this month.
The two-year U.S. Treasuries yield
was 2.226 percent, well above the dividend yield of the S&P 500,
which stood at 1.88 percent.
A rise in dollar interest
rates could also bode ill for potential borrowers, including U.S. home
buyers and many companies that have expanded borrowing for years to take
advantage of low dollar funding costs.
MSCI’s gauge of equity market performance in
47 countries, which gained 0.8 percent on Monday, rose another 0.1
percent on Tuesday, taking it to a new three-week high.
Still,
it is down 2.2 percent so far this month, suggesting its record
15-month winning streak that began in November 2016 is at risk.
In the
currency markets, the euro traded at $1.2327, up 0.1 percent in Asia but
off its three-year high of $1.2556 hit earlier this month.
The dollar traded at 106.85 yen, stabilizing for now above its 15-month low of 105.545 set on Feb 16.
Fed funds rate futures were almost fully pricing in a rate hike at the Fed’s next policy meeting on March 20-21.

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