Asian Equities Set to Advance; Dollar Opens Lower: Markets Wrap
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2023-07-31 06:57
Asian equity futures point to gains across the region when markets open Monday following a rally on Wall

Asian equity futures point to gains across the region when markets open Monday following a rally on Wall Street as investors shook off worries over the Bank of Japan’s policy tweak and embraced the latest US economic data.

Contracts for Japan and Hong Kong rose at least 1% while those for Australia edged up 0.3%. Megacaps led gains in US shares on Friday, with the Nasdaq 100 climbing almost 2% and the S&P 500 advancing 1%. Meta Platforms Inc. and Tesla Inc. each climbed more than 4%, while Intel Corp. rallied about 6.5% on a bullish sales forecast. Bond yields fell.

Key gauges of inflation showed further easing while Americans grew more optimistic about the economy, with investors wagering that its neither running too hot nor too cold.

The dollar traded slightly lower early Monday against most Group-of-10 peers. The yen rose marginally after snapping a four-day rally on Friday, when the BOJ adjusted policy to give bond yields more room to rise.

Currency and bond markets face the risk of continued volatility as investors weigh whether rate hikes from the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank last week mark the end of their tightening cycles.

The Australian dollar and British pound are also in the spotlight with their central banks slated to meet on Tuesday and Thursday.

Manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMI data from China will be in focus Monday, with economists projecting more weakness in factory activity.

More government efforts to shore up the Chinese economy emerged on Friday, including a plan to boost consumer industries and steps to grow an exchange dedicated to helping small firms get access to funds.

Industrial production and retail sales figures in Japan will be parsed for more clues on the nation’s economic health and its impact on inflation.

On Friday, BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda said the central bank would allow yields to rise above a ceiling it now calls a point of reference. That paves the way for a future normalization of policy that has implications for a wide range of global assets and markets heavily exposed to Japanese money.

Yields on 10-year Japanese government bonds jumped to their highest in nine years as investors speculated whether this tweak was a precursor to more drastic changes for Japan’s ultra-easy monetary policy.

Any significant adjustment to the YCC policy would have implications for the Treasury market given that Japan households are one of the largest buyers of US debt, according to Dennis DeBusschere founder of 22V Research. The rationale is: if yields in Japan become more attractive, there could be selling of US government bonds to buy the Asian nation’s debt.

Key events this week:

Some of the main moves in markets:

Stocks

Currencies

Cryptocurrencies

Bonds

Commodities

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

--With assistance from Rita Nazareth.

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