Friday, November 22, 2024

Bond Yields Decline as Asian Stocks Fluctuate: Markets Wrap

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(Bloomberg) — Treasuries and major equity benchmarks advanced in Asian trading, with Japan an exception as a stronger yen provided a headwind for local shares.

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Mainland China and Hong Kong shares rallied alongside those in Australia and South Korea. The moves offset Japan’s slide to keep MSCI’s Asian index flat. US futures were little changed after the S&P 500 rose 0.2% and the Nasdaq 100 climbed 0.8%. The moves partly reflected the 22% leap for Tesla Inc. shares on strong earnings and forecast.

Treasury yields fell for a second day as traders reassessed bets on US rate cuts and risks from the upcoming presidential election. Yields for Australian and New Zealand bonds also declined. The dollar was steady, on track for a fourth straight weekly gain.

A surge in Treasury yields earlier in the week had led to risk-off moves across markets, as traders scaled back expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts. Economic data next week will provide more clarity, while polls show a tie between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris in swing states.

“After the election we are still expecting the dollar index to trend lower because we expect the Fed will further cut interest rates no matter who wins,” said Carie Li, global market strategist, DBS Bank Hong Kong, speaking on Bloomberg Television.

The yen held gains from Thursday against the dollar ahead of the weekend’s election that may see Japan’s ruling coalition lose its majority in the lower house of parliament for the first time since 2009. Such an outcome would weaken the yen and Japanese stocks, according to strategists.

US stocks and bonds had advanced on Thursday as US economic data showed new home sales beating estimates, initial jobless claims dropping and business activity expanding at a solid pace.

The “Goldilocks” data that was broadly in line with forecasts “is the best outcome for a continued rebound in stocks and bonds,” said Tom Essaye at The Sevens Report.

In Japan, Governor Kazuo Ueda signaled the central bank won’t hike interest rates next week, with almost all BOJ watchers already expecting no policy shift this month. Ueda spoke ahead of the nation’s election this weekend and after the yen slid to the lowest level since July 31 against the dollar earlier this week.

Elsewhere in Asia, China’s recent barrage of fiscal measures fall short of what’s needed to address deflationary risks, according to one senior International Monetary Fund official. The central government “has to spend” more to address the property crash and ease price pressures, according to Krishna Srinivasan, the organization’s Asia-Pacific department chief.

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