Business World

Asia stocks bounce; dollar cautious before inflation test

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SYDNEY — Asian share markets rallied on Monday on hopes a key reading on US inflation will show some cooling, while the US dollar was restrained by the risk of higher European interest rates and Japanese interventi­on.

Holidays in China and South Korea made for slow trading, while traders were unsure what implicatio­ns Ukraine’s surprising success against Russian forces might have.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 0.5%, having bounced modestly from a twoyear low hit last week. Japan’s Nikkei added another 1.1%, after rallying 2% last week.

Chinese blue chips firmed 1.3% ahead of retail and industry data due later in the week that may show some improvemen­t in August after a disappoint­ing July.

Wall Street struggled to extend Friday’s bounce with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures flat. EUROSTOXX 50 futures gained 0.6% and FTSE futures 0.2%.

Bulls are hoping Tuesday’s reading on US consumer prices will hint at a peak for inflation as falling petrol prices are seen pulling down the headline index by 0.1%, according to a Reuters poll.

The core is forecast to rise 0.3%, though some analysts see a chance of a softer report.

“Arguably, with the economy having contracted through the first half, and household discretion­ary spending capacity under significan­t pressure, we are due a modest downside surprise,” said economists at Westpac.

“As such, we forecast +0.2% for core and -0.2% for headline,” they added. “If achieved though, it should not be assumed that October and beyond will see repeats, with volatility likely to persist.”

A soft number might revive speculatio­n the Federal Reserve will only hike by 50 basis points (bps) this month, though it would likely have to be very weak to have a real impact given how stridently hawkish policy makers have been recently.

The market currently implies an 88% chance the Fed will hike by 75 bps.

Bank of America global economist Ethan Harris fears that by focusing on actual inflation to determine when to stop, central banks may go too far. The bank has lifted its target for the federal funds rate to a range of 4.0-4.25%, with a 75-bp hike in September and smaller rises thereafter.

“For investors, this means more pressure on interest rates, more weakness in risk assets and further upside for the superstron­g dollar,” said Mr. Harris.

“In our view, these trends only turn when markets price the full fury of central bank hikes and we are not quite there yet.”

For now, the dollar has run into some profit taking from a market that is very long the currency after a month of sustained gains.

So rapidly has the dollar risen on the yen that Japanese authoritie­s are becoming increasing­ly vocal in protesting their currency’s decline, sparking speculatio­n of interventi­on and putting pressure on the Bank of Japan to moderate its policy of yield curve control.

Japan’s government must take steps as needed to counter excessive declines in the yen, a senior government official said on Sunday, after it hit its weakest level against the dollar in 24 years.

Yet after an early dip, the dollar soon rallied to be up 0.4% at ¥143.14, though still off last week’s top of ¥144.99.

The dollar index stood at 108.770, having reached as high as 110.790 last week.

The euro nudged up 0.4% to $1.0080, and away from its recent trough of $0.9865.

It was helped in part by a Reuters report that European Central Bank policy makers see a growing risk that they will have to raise their key interest rate to 2% or more to curb record-high inflation despite a likely recession.

Analysts at ANZ noted the dollar over the past month was up roughly 9% against the euro and the Chinese yuan, 12% against the British pound and 19% against the yen.

“The rampant US dollar is causing strain in developing countries, which are finding imports priced in USD more expensive,” they said in a note. —

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