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Asian Stock Market | China stocks bounce loses steam; focus turns to ECB

Asian stocks traded cautiously and bonds fell on Thursday while investors waited on more details of China’s stimulus plans and for a European Central Bank meeting later in the session.
The dollar bounced from lows after a survey showed U.S. business activity picking up in January. The Canadian dollar fell after the Bank of Canada held rates but dropped language that had said it was prepared for further hikes.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan opened a new tab and was up 0.5 percent in early trade, with the Hang Seng (.HSI) new tab opening 0.6 percent higher and mainland indexes steady. Japan’s Nikkei, opens new tab fell 0.3 percent. The strong U.S. data and a cut in Chinese bank reserve requirements, releasing about a trillion yuan ($140 billion) for lending, had cheered investors – lifting the S&P 500, opening a new tab to a record high, and world stocks, opening a new tab to a two-year peak.

China’s cut came on the heels of a collapse in China’s equity markets that pushed the Shanghai Composite, opened a new tab to a four-year low on Monday, and hammered the Hang Seng. Along with a Bloomberg report that China is mulling a big rescue fund for the stock market, it seems to have stabilized things for now but without inspiring much confidence yet in the outlook. “This is not the panacea that will change the narrative too much,” said Tim Graf, head of Europe, Middle East and Africa macro strategy at State Street in London. “More targeted stimulus would be a more powerful lever to push and they seem to be reluctant to do that.”

The Hang Seng is trading 8 percent above Monday’s 15-month low, but it remains down more than 6 percent for the year to date and almost 20 percent below where it began 2023. World stocks are up 21 percent since then. S&P 500 futures were 0.1 percent lower in Asia, as were Nasdaq 100 futures, dragged by a 6 percent drop in Tesla, opening new tab shares after the bell following earnings that missed expectations and a warning of a sales slowdown ahead. South Korea beat expectations for growth in the fourth quarter of 2023, though the Kospi, opens new tab slipped and the won was steady.

In currency markets gains for the Australian dollar on optimism that China is putting together a stimulus package proved shortlived. The Aussie handed back gains overnight and was down 0.1 percent at $0.6569 in the Asia morning. The euro was steady at $1.0875, while the yen was holding firm on the strong side of 148 to the dollar after hints at rate rises in Japan triggered a sharp sell-off in the Japanese government bond market.

The Bank of Japan left rates on hold this week but governor Kazuo Ueda said it was looking more likely that inflation would sustainably reach the bank’s 2 percent goal. Ten-year Japanese government bond yields rose 2.5 bps to 0.73 percent. Global bond markets have also been under pressure as traders pare back expectations for rate cuts. Wednesday’s strong activity data drove two-year U.S Treasury yields from lows overnight and they were steady at 4.37 percent in Asia.

The European Central Bank is likely to push back on investor bets for aggressive policy easing this spring at its policy meeting later on Thursday. Interest rate futures price about a 40 percent chance of a U.S. rate cut in March, down from 75 percent at the start of last week. “For you to get rate cuts in March, we need to see bad data next month,” said Remi Olu-Pitan, head of multi-asset growth and income at Schroders at an outlook briefing in Singapore. “And if that comes through there’s a problem for equities,” she said, since they are not priced for weakness.

The apparent contradiction will most likely “normalize through bond yields rising,” she said. In commodity markets, Brent futures were 0.2 percent higher at $80.22 a barrel. Singapore iron ore steadied at $135 a tonne while London copper had shot to a three-week high on hopes of more stimulus measures from China.

The article originally appeared on Zee Business.

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