Thursday, December 12, 2024

Asian Stocks Rise After US Inflation Backs Fed Cut: Markets Wrap

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(Bloomberg) — Asian stocks rose Thursday after US equities snapped a two-day slide on benign inflation data that supported expectations of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut this month.

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Japanese equities climbed while Australian stocks traded flat. Futures contracts for US equities edged lower in Asian trading after the Nasdaq 100 advanced 1.9% to a new high Wednesday, with the strong showing for tech pushing Amazon.com Inc and Meta Platforms Inc. to fresh records. Broadcom Inc. rose 6.6% following a report that the chipmaker was working on an AI deal with Apple Inc.

Yields for Australian government debt jumped and the Australian dollar strengthened on Thursday after data showed more jobs were added to the economy than expected and unemployment unexpectedly fell, in a sign of economic resilience. Treasuries were steady on Thursday after a selloff in the prior session sent yields higher across the curve.

The moves in Treasuries followed US consumer price index data that came in line with expectations, cementing forecasts for the Fed to cut rates by 25 basis points later in December. Swaps traders have now virtually priced in such a move, compared with a 75% chance a week ago.

“The fact that inflation is not slowing down rapidly reinforces the view that the economy will strengthen from next year onwards, and investors’ appetite for risk has increased,” said Takashi Ito, senior strategist at Nomura Securities.

An index of dollar strength fell Thursday, moderating a gain on Wednesday that was helped along by the higher Treasury yields. China’s yuan slid the most in a week following a report that Beijing is considering allowing the currency to weaken next year in response to the threat of a trade war with the US.

Meanwhile, China’s two-day Central Economic Work Conference is expected to map out policies for next year, following stimulus signals from top leaders.

Officials must focus on, “how will they deliver fiscal stimulus more directly to consumers so the economy can more directly shift to consumption-led rather than investment led,” Amy Xie Patrick, head of income strategies for Pendal Group, said on Bloomberg Television.

The yen strengthened against the greenback, paring a decline on Wednesday. Bank of Japan officials see little cost to waiting before raising interest rates, while still being open to a hike next week depending on data and market developments, according to people familiar with the matter.

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