Viet Nam News

Asia stocks struggle for traction over slipping yuan

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Asian equities struggled for traction yesterday as mixed messages from US monetary policymake­rs and a wobble in the Chinese yuan left traders unsettled and tentative with Friday's release of US inflation data hanging over the outlook.

The risk of Japan intervenin­g to prevent further falls in the yen squeezed the dollar, however it rose against the yuan on speculatio­n that China may tolerate a weaker currency.

MSCI'S broadest index of Asia-pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.3 per cent, led by chipmaker gains for South Korea's Kospi. Other markets lacked direction and drifted either side of flat, with sentiment in China and Hong Kong still fragile after Friday's sudden slide in the yuan.

Investors in Hong Kong were waiting on signs of support for the property market and to see whether Friday's unexpected fall in the yuan signalled a policy shift, said Steven Leung, director of institutio­nal sales at broker UOB Kay Hian.

Insurer AIA, down 17 per cent in 10 trading days since the company did not promise new buybacks in its results announceme­nt, highlighte­d the fragile mood.

Japan's Nikkei was steady as was the yen , which last traded at 151.38 per dollar. S&P 500 futures rose 0.1 per cent. European futures were flat. FTSE futures fell 0.3 per cent.

On Monday, the mixed outlook from Federal Reserve officials threw a few wildcards into the policy outlook while markets wait on the next US inflation indicators due on Good Friday.

US stocks ended lower on Monday, ahead of key inflation data due later in the week.

Chicago Fed President Austan

Goolsbee said he had pencilled in three rate cuts this year, while Fed Governor Lisa Cook urged caution and Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic re-iterated Friday remarks trimming his expectatio­ns to one cut.

"Comments by FOMC participan­ts suggest to us that four voters – Bostic, Bowman, Mester, and Barkin – see zero, one or two cuts this year," said Standard Chartered strategist Steve Englander.

"We still think (chairman Jerome) Powell has eight votes for easing, but he probably does not want an 8-4 vote on the first cut of the cycle. Rather, he may hope that good inflation outcomes will allow him to swing a couple of votes into the cutting camp in the coming months."

US interest rate futures price about three Fed rate cuts this year and about a three-in-four chance of the first cut in June.

US two-year yields , which track short-term interest rate expectatio­ns, rose in New York trade overnight then fell 3.5 basis points in Asia trade to 4.59 per cent.

In foreign exchange, Monday's rhetoric from Japan's top currency diplomat, Masato Kanda, kept the yen steady as traders weigh the risk of Japan buying heavily. Kanda said the yen's recent slide was "strange" and "speculativ­e".

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) lifted interest rates last week but the yen has fallen near to three-decade lows on the dollar.

China's yuan opened steady after a stronger-than-expected fixing of its trading band, but selling pressure soon drove it to the weak side of its 200-day moving average at 7.2184 per dollar.

Markets were unsettled by a sharp drop in the yuan on Friday, after months of tight trading, and some speculate China is loosening its grip on the currency to allow it to fall.

"Whether this reflects a shift in FX policy remains to be seen but accommodat­ive monetary conditions are necessary in the face of growth headwinds," said Bofa Securities' strategist Adarsh Sinha.

"If (yuan) depreciati­on sustains and coincides with a weaker credit impulse, Asia FX is vulnerable."

Later on Tuesday (local time), US manufactur­ing, services and consumer confidence figures are due. US core PCE data is due on Friday.

Gold and oil prices were broadly steady in commoditie­s trade, with spot gold at $2,172 an ounce and Brent crude futures up 7 cents a barrel to $86.82.

Bitcoin hovered

$70,000 after rising

Monday. just above sharply on

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