Business World

Asian shares markets subdued for BoJ meet, US inf lation test

- Reuters

SYDNEY — Asia stocks slipped on Monday in a subdued start to a week where Japan’s central bank might edge further away from its uber-easy policies, while a key reading on US inflation is expected to underpin market pricing of interest rate cuts there.

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) meets Tuesday amid much chatter that it is considerin­g how and when to move away from negative interest rates. None of the analysts polled by Reuters expected a definitive move at this meeting, but policy makers might start laying the groundwork for an eventual shift.

April was favored by 17 of 28 economists as the kick-off for negative rates to be scrapped, making the BoJ one of the few central banks in the world actually tightening.

“Since the last meeting in October, 10-year JGB yields have fallen and the yen has appreciate­d, giving the BoJ little incentive to revise policy at this stage,” said Barclays economist Christian Keller.

“We think the BoJ will wait to confirm the result of the ‘shunto’ wage negotiatio­ns next spring, before moving in April.”

Japan’s Nikkei lost 0.7%, weighed in part by a firm yen. MSCI’s broadest index of AsiaPacifi­c shares outside Japan dipped 0.3%.

South Korea’s main index added 0.3%, showing no obvious reaction to reports North Korea had fired a ballistic missile off its east coast.

Chinese blue chips edged down 0.3%, following five straight weeks of falls.

S&P 500 futures inched up 0.3%, while Nasdaq futures added 0.2%. EUROSTOXX 50 futures slipped 0.3% and FTSE futures 0.1%.

Over in the United States, a reading on core personal consumptio­n expenditur­e (PCE) index is forecast by analysts to rise 0.2% in November with the annual inflation rate slowing to its lowest since mid-2021 at 3.4%.

Analysts suspect the balance of risk is on the downside and a rise of 0.1% for the month would see the six-month annualized pace of inflation slow to just 2.1% and almost at the US Federal Reserve’s target of 2%.

Markets reckon the slowdown in inflation means the Fed will have to ease policy just to stop real rates from rising, and are wagering on early and aggressive action.

New York Fed President John Williams did try to rain on the parade on Friday by saying there was no talk of easing by policy makers, but markets were disincline­d to listen.

Two-year Treasury yields ticked up only slightly in response, and still ended the week down a steep 28 basis points (bps) at the lowest close since mid-May.

Yields on 10-year notes stood at 3.91%, having dived 33 bps last week in the biggest weekly fall since early 2020.

Fed fund futures imply a 74% chance of a rate cut as early as March, while May has 39 bps of easing priced in. The market also implies at least 140 bps of cuts for all of 2024.

“We now forecast three consecutiv­e 25bp cuts in March, May, and June, followed by a slower pace of one cut per quarter until reaching a terminal rate of 3.25-3.5%, 25bp lower than we previously expected,” wrote analysts at Goldman Sachs in a client note.

“This implies five cuts in 2024 and three more cuts in 2025.”

If correct, such easing would allow some Asian central banks to ease earlier, with Goldman bringing forward cuts in India, Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippine­s.

The investment bank also raised its forecast for the S&P 500 which it now sees ending 2024 at 5,100, while decelerati­ng inflation and Fed easing would keep real yields low and support a price-toearnings multiple greater than 19.

The market’s dovish outlook for US rates saw the dollar slip 1.3% against a basket of currencies=USD last week, though the Fed is hardly alone in the rate-cutting stakes.

Markets imply around 150 bps of easing by the European Central Bank next year, and 113 bps of cuts from the Bank of England.

That outlook restrained the euro at $1.0909 EUR=EBS, having pulled back from a top of $1.1004 on Friday. The dollar was looking more vulnerable against the yen at 142.23 JPY=EBS, having slid 1.9% last week.

The drop in the dollar and yields should be positive for gold at $2,021 an ounce, though that was short of its recent all-time peak of $2,135.40. —

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