Asian Stock Markets
Asian stocks were mostly lower on Thursday after Wall Street marked its
worst monthly performance in two years as hawkish-sounding comments from
new Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reverberated across the broader
risk asset markets.
The dollar, which retreated to three-year lows last month, has taken heart from the Fed chair’s comments.
Long-term
U.S. Treasury yields stood little changed at 2.864 percent after
declining about 3 basis points overnight on month-end purchases by
investors rebalancing their portfolios and weaker Wall Street shares.
Spreadbetters expected European stocks to open lower, with
Britain’s FTSE falling 0.7 percent, Germany’s DAX slipping 0.8 percent
and France’s CAC retreating 0.75 percent.
Investors have
been on edge in recent weeks amid concerns that rising interest rates
in advanced economies, led by the United States, could sap global
growth.
Powell, in his first public appearance as head
of the Fed, vowed at a congressional hearing on Tuesday (U.S. time) to
prevent the economy from overheating while sticking with a plan to
gradually raise interest rates.
Those comments rekindled
speculation in equity markets over U.S. monetary tightening this year
happening faster than expected, feeding concerns that higher borrowing
costs could crimp corporate activity and cool economic growth.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.5 percent and headed for its third day of losses.
Chinese
shares bucked the trend and edged up after a private survey showed
growth in China’s manufacturing sector picking up to a six-month high.
Shanghai shares were 0.15 percent higher.
Australian stocks fell 0.7 percent, South Korea’s KOSPI shed 1.2 percent and Japan’s Nikkei dropped 1.55 percent.
The
losses in Asia came amid a broad selloff on Wall Street, where the Dow
and S&P 500 capped their worst months since January 2016 overnight
after suffering sharp losses early in February.
The
Dow scaled an all-time high late in January, before falling about 12
percent from that peak at the start of February as a rise in U.S. yields
to multi-year highs unnerved Wall Street.
It went on to recover a bulk
of those losses, but the rebound stalled in the wake of Powell’s
comments.
The Fed’s last round of economic projections
in December pointed to three rate increases this year, but Powell’s
remarks prompted investors to wager on four rate rises instead.
DOLLAR COMEBACK CONTINUES
The dollar, which retreated to three-year lows last month, has taken heart from the Fed chair’s comments.
The dollar index against a basket of six
major currencies rose to 90.744, its highest since Jan. 19 and last
stood at 90.703.
The index has managed to claw back from
the three-year trough of 88.253 set in mid-February when fears of a
ballooning U.S. budget deficit and lingering worries that Washington
could pursue a weak dollar policy took a toll.
U.S.
crude oil futures stood little changed at $61.65 per barrel after
sliding more than 2 percent overnight. Brent crude lost 0.1 percent to
$64.66 per barrel.
A stronger greenback tends to weigh
on commodities including crude as it makes them more expensive for
non-U.S. buyers of dollar-denominated products.
The
euro was steady at $1.2192 and in close reach of a 1-1/2-month low of
$1.2188 plumbed the previous day.
The common currency came under
pressure after data on Wednesday showed euro zone inflation slowing to a
14-month low and underscored the European Central Bank’s caution over
removing its monetary stimulus.
The dollar was little
changed at 106.750 yen , having slipped from the week’s peak of 107.680
as broader risk aversion favoured its Japanese peer.
The Australian dollar was down 0.45 percent at $0.7728 after brushing $0.7717 , its lowest since late December.

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