Friday, December 20, 2024

Asian Stocks Fluctuate After Downbeat US Session: Markets Wrap

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(Bloomberg) — Asian stocks traded in a tight range early Friday, after the Federal Reserve’s hawkish pivot continued to weigh on US equities and bonds but lifted the dollar.

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Shares slid in Australia and South Korea while Hong Kong equity futures dropped. Stocks in Japan edged higher after the yen weakened. US contracts slipped after the S&P 500 ended marginally lower Thursday, on pace for its worst week since September. The Nasdaq 100 dropped 0.5%.

Treasuries were little changed in Asia after selling pressure on Thursday lifted the 10-year yield to 4.57%, a level last seen in May. The policy-sensitive two-year yield fell, widening the gap between the two maturities to levels last seen two years ago. A Bloomberg dollar index compounded gains from earlier in the week to hover around 2022 highs. Australian and New Zealand yields rose early Friday.

The yen weakened against the dollar even as Japan’s key inflation gauge strengthened for the first time in three months. That added to Thursday’s decline after the Bank of Japan left borrowing costs unchanged and Governor Kazuo Ueda cast doubt on whether the bank could hike rates in January.

The mixed moves in Asia came after data released Thursday showed resilience in the US economy, weakening the need for imminent rate cuts.

The economy expanded at a faster clip in the third quarter than previously expected, according to the latest gross domestic product data. Consumer spending was marked up. Applications for US unemployment benefits fell and existing-home sales in the US topped a rate of 4 million in November for the first time in six months. One of the Fed’s preferred gauges of inflation was revised up.

Given that Chair Jerome Powell said future easing would require fresh progress on inflation, markets will be closely watching the last noteworthy piece of data for the year — personal consumption expenditures for November — due Friday.

“Investors are being defensive today,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. “They’re not jumping back into the market with both feet. So, if we don’t get some relief from the bond market soon, there might not be a Santa Claus rally this year.”

Elsewhere, President-elect Donald Trump and House Republicans struck a deal to avert a US government shutdown and suspend the federal debt limit for two years.

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