Asian markets news: Stocks climb as traders shrug off inflation surprise
Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields finished the New York session a bit more than a basis point lower and fell by a further basis point early in the Asia session to 4.24 per cent.
Asian markets news: Stocks rose on Thursday, as traders figured a small upside surprise for US inflation was unlikely to push up interest rates and turned their focus to a European Central Bank meeting later in the session.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.4 per cent in early trade. Tokyo's Nikkei rose 0.8 per cent to a one-week high.
Overnight data showed higher fuel prices had lifted headline US consumer prices by the most in 14 months in August, for an annual rate of 3.7 per cent which was a touch above expectations. Core inflation slowed to an annual 4.3 per cent, as expected.
Treasury yields initially spiked higher, as did the US dollar, before both retraced the move.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields finished the New York session a bit more than a basis point lower and fell by a further basis point early in the Asia session to 4.24 per cent. Two-year yields spiked above 5 per cent, but were last at 4.97 per cent.
"I think markets are largely prepared for a rebound in inflation, given the rapidly rising global energy prices," said Glenn Yin, head of research and analysis at AETOS Capital Group in Melbourne.
"It does feel like the highly anticipated Fed pause next week is outweighing the fact that inflation has risen at the fastest pace in more than a year."
Fed funds futures hardly budged on the inflation data, and imply nearly no chance of a rate hike next week, and about a 45 per cent chance of another hike by year's end.
Also overnight chip designer Arm Holdings secured a $54.5 billion valuation, with its IPO pricing at $51-a-share at the top of the indicated range. It begins trading on Thursday.
The S&P 500 rose 0.1 per cent and futures rose 0.2 per cent in Asia. European futures were flat.
Around Asia stock moves were mostly modest, with the Hang Seng up 0.2 per cent, South Korea's Kospi up 0.9 per cent and mainland Chinese markets flat. Chinese electric vehicle stocks slipped after the EU announced a probe into their subsidies.
HIKE OR HOLD?
The euro has been supported this week by creeping expectations for the European Central Bank to hike rates on Thursday, though analysts say it may struggle for further gains.
Markets are leaning towards a hike that would take Europe's key interest rate to a record peak and the common currency - last at $1.0739 - has traded as high as $1.0770 this week.
"Either the ECB surprises by not hiking, or they deliver a very dovish late cycle hike," said Brent Donnelly at Spectra Markets. "Either way, it's not bullish euro," he said.
Elsewhere in foreign exchange markets the Australian dollar was boosted by a surge in employment in August and it rose about 0.4 per cent to $0.6440. Interest rate expectations were little changed.
The New Zealand dollar was also firmer at $0.5941, while the dollar slipped about 0.2 per cent to buy 147.11 yen .
The yen has mostly handed back gains made after Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda hinted at the conditions for an end to negative short-term rates, as traders figure on any exit being slow and the gap with US rates remaining wide.
China's yuan was steady at 7.2718 per dollar.
In commodity markets oil is on a tear as Saudi Arabia and Russia extend production cuts to the end of 2023. Brent crude futures are up 30 per cent in three months to $92.32 a barrel.
Gas markets were skittish as strikes were set to begin at production projects in Australia that account for more than 5 per cent of global supply. Overnight benchmark European gas prices were up 6.5 per cent.
US retail sales figures are also due on Thursday, with markets expecting to see a slowdown.
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