The Freeman

Asian markets mixed after Wall St record as China worries weigh

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HONG KONG, China — Asian markets were mixed Monday following a record finish on Wall Street, while hopes for an early US interest rate cut were dealt a fresh blow by Federal Reserve officials looking to rein in investor expectatio­ns.

A surge in tech titans including Apple, Amazon, Nvidia and Facebook parent Meta pushed the S&P 500 to its first new all-time high since early 2022 thanks to bets on lower borrowing costs this year.

The rally was helped by a closely watched survey from the University of Michigan showing a surge in consumer confidence and optimism about falling inflation.

However, analysts warned that traders may have run a little ahead of themselves at the end of last year as they forecast the Fed will cut rates up to six times before December, with the first coming in March.

A string of data in recent weeks has shown inflation remains sticky and well above the bank's two percent target, while the jobs market continues to show resilience despite borrowing costs sitting at two-decade highs.

Minutes from the Fed's most recent meeting also showed decision-makers were happy to keep monetary policy tight until they are confident prices are under control.

On Friday, San Francisco Fed boss Mary Daly said it was likely too early to think of moving just yet.

"While I think it’s appropriat­e for us to look forward and ask when would policy adjustment­s be necessary so we don’t put a strangleho­ld on the economy, it’s really premature to think that that’s around the corner," she told Fox Business on Friday.

"Do I get consistent evidence that inflation is coming down, or do I get any early signs with the labor market starting to falter?

"Neither one of those right now is pushing me to think that an adjustment is necessary."

Atlanta Fed chief Raphael Bostic said that while he was open to changing his mind, he did not expect a tweak until the third quarter, while his Chicago counterpar­t Austan Goolsbee added that decision-making was "fundamenta­lly about the data".

The chances of a reduction before the end of the first quarter fell last week to less than 50 percent, having been above 80 percent the week before, Bloomberg News reported.

Tokyo was the main winner again, extending its blockbuste­r start to the year thanks to a weaker yen and rising Japanese inflation. Traders are awaiting a Bank of Japan policy decision later in the week.

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