Asian Stock Markets
Asian stocks gained on Wednesday, while the dollar advanced as traders
near-term focus shifted to the minutes of the Federal Reserve’s last
policy meeting for hints on the future pace of U.S. monetary tightening.
Japan’s Nikkei trimmed earlier gains but held on to end the day 0.2 percent higher.
Later on
Wednesday, investors will turn their attention to the minutes of Fed’s
last policy meeting in late January. Analysts said a hawkish tone to the
minutes could prompt markets to price in the risk of a faster U.S.
interest rate hikes and help lift the dollar further.
Spot gold touched a one-week trough of $1,327.90 an ounce, having declined 1.4 percent so far this week.
But spreadbetters expected European stocks to follow Wall
Street’s lead and open lower, with
Britain’s FTSE slipping 0.3 percent
and Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC losing 0.6 percent.
MSCI’s
broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.7 percent
after slipping earlier in the session following the U.S. market losses,
which snapped a six-session winning streak.[.N]
Japan’s Nikkei trimmed earlier gains but held on to end the day 0.2 percent higher.
Australian stocks were nearly flat and South Korea’s KOSPI gained 0.55 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 1.2 percent.
U.S.
Treasury yields rose as the bond market braced for this week’s $258
billion deluge of new government debt. The two-year bill yield touched
2.282 percent, the highest since September 2008. [US/]
Increased
government borrowing has applied steady upward pressure on Treasury
yields. The
Treasury Department has issued more debt in anticipation of a
higher deficit from last year’s major tax overhaul and a budget deal
that will increase federal spending over the next two years.
The
dollar benefited from the higher yields, with its index against a
basket of six major currencies edging up to a one-week high of 89.904.
The index has bounced 0.9 percent so far this week after slumping 1.5 percent the previous week to a three-year low.
The
U.S. currency has been weighed down by a variety of factors this year,
including concerns that Washington might pursue a weak dollar strategy
and the perceived erosion of its yield advantage as other countries
start to scale back their easy money strategies.
Confidence in the dollar has also been shaken by mounting worries over the U.S. budget deficit.
But the greenback managed to find bids once the dust began to settle after last week’s tumble.
The
dollar extended an overnight surge and gained 0.45 percent to 107.800
yen. The euro fell 0.1 percent to $1.2323 following losses of 0.55
percent the previous day.
The Australian dollar lost 0.4 percent to $0.7852 and the New Zealand dollar dipped 0.2 percent to at $0.7333.
The
stronger dollar weighed on commodities, with Brent crude futures losing
0.8 percent to $64.73 per barrel and U.S. crude oil futures slipping 1
percent to $61.15.
U.S. crude hit a near two-week high
the previous day on news of inventory declines at a key storage hub and
from expectations that top OPEC producers could extend cooperation
beyond 2018.

No comments:
Post a Comment