Business World

Stocks, dollar under pressure

-

Shares and the US dollar dipped on Monday while US bond yields slumped to fivemonth lows after soft US economic data hurt investor sentiment already frayed by worries over North Korea and coming French elections. That dwarfed any relief for market players after the US Treasury department did not name China as a currency manipulato­r.

TOKYO — Shares and the US dollar dipped on Monday while US bond yields slumped to fivemonth lows after soft US economic data hurt investor sentiment already frayed by worries over North Korea and coming French elections.

That dwarfed any relief for market players after the US Treasury department did not name China as a currency manipulato­r, avoiding an all- out confrontat­ion on currencies between the world’s two largest economies.

S&P 500 mini futures declined 0.15% to 2,324, edging near a sixweek low of 2,317.75 touched in late March following US President Donald J. Trump’s defeat on health care reform.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.10% in holiday-thinned trade, while Japan’s Nikkei fell as much as 0.60% to hit a five-month low before ending up 0.10%.

A raft of Chinese economic data beat market expectatio­ns but did not produce notable market reactions as investors had been already optimistic following a recent string of positive China numbers.

China’s economy grew 6.90% in the first quarter from a year earlier, a tad above economists’ forecast of 6.80%.

However, mainland Chinese shares fell, with Shanghai Composite Index down 1% at 3,212, risking a close below its 60-day average at 3,216, seen as an important support by investors and weighed by warning from top securities regulator to combat market misbehavio­r.

US retail sales dropped more than expected in March while annual core inflation slowed to 2%, the smallest advance since November 2015, from 2.20% in February, data showed on Friday.

That helped to drive down the 10-year US Treasuries yield to 2.200%, its lowest level since mid- November from around 2.228% on Thursday before a market holiday on Friday.

The yield had risen above 2.60% in December and again in March, from around 1.85% before the US presidenti­al election, on expectatio­ns of Mr. Trump’s stimulus. But growing perception that Mr. Trump will struggle to push any tax cuts and fiscal spending programs through the Congress has prompted unwinding of the “Trump” trade.

“At the moment, it is hard to see any factors that could drive up bond yields,” said Hiroko Iwaki, senior strategist at Mizuho Securities. “And compared to US bond yields, which have given up much of their gains after the election, US share prices, having gone through a limited correction, look vulnerable given potential developmen­ts in North Korea or the French election.”

Fed fund futures rose in price, now pricing less than a 50% chance of a rate hike in its June 13-14 meeting for the first time in about a month. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines