Asia stocks, FX climb

- Advertisement -

SINGAPORE- Asian stocks rose and sterling stumbled on Thursday as cooling UK inflation lifted risk appetite ahead of central bank meetings next week, while disappointing earnings results from Netflix and Tesla pushed US futures lower.

Meanwhile, China’s yuan shot up after authorities tweaked cross-border financing rules and major state-owned banks were seen selling dollars in moves analysts said were designed to shore up the currency.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was 0.53 percent higher, on course to snap its three day losing streak. Japan’s Nikkei slid 0.93 percent.

- Advertisement -spot_img

China stocks have been under pressure in recent weeks as soft economic data weighed on sentiment, with investors waiting for meaningful stimulus to jump start the country’s stuttering post-pandemic recovery.

On Thursday, the Shanghai Composite Index was 0.1 percent higher, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gained 0.3 percent.

China on Wednesday pledged to make the private economy “bigger, better and stronger” with a series of policy measures designed to help private business.

Britain’s high rate of inflation fell more than expected in June to its slowest in over a year at 7.9 percent, data showed on Wednesday, with markets dialing back expectations of further aggressive rate hikes from the Bank of England.

Sterling last fetched $1.2959, up 0.17 percent on the day, having tumbled 0.7 percent overnight.

The Bank of England is due to meet in the first week of August but before that central bank meetings in Japan, Europe and the United States will likely grab investors’ attention.

Traders and analysts expect the European Central Bank to raise its benchmark rate by 25 basis points but what comes after that has been up for debate in the wake of recent dovish tone taken by the central bank’s policymakers.

The Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said this week that there was still some distance to sustainably and stably achieving the central bank’s 2 percent inflation target, dousing speculation of a hawkish policy shift next week.

Markets seem a lot more certain of the Federal Reserve’s next steps, with traders expecting a 25 basis point hike but no more after that.

“As investors grow more confident that peak inflation is definitively behind us, so do expectations that the US Federal Reserve’s current rate hiking cycle will finally be over” after next week’s meeting, said Nuveen’s Chief Investment Officer Saira Malik. – Reuters

Author

Share post: