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Asian markets rally as Powell eases rate cut worries

Tech surge propels Asian markets as Yen plummets
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April 04, 2024 (MLN): Asian markets rose Thursday after US data provided a fresh indicator that inflation was easing and Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell soothed worries about the bank's plans to cut interest rates this year, as APP reported. 

An equities rally that started at the back end of 2023 has stuttered in recent weeks after a string of reports suggested the economy was too strong and price too sticky for officials to begin easing monetary policy this year.

Warnings from decision-makers that they were worried about bringing down borrowing costs too soon have also played on investors' minds, causing them to pare back expectations for how many — if any — were coming before January.

But those concerns were allayed somewhat Wednesday when Powell said he still saw cuts coming this year.

He told a conference in California that rates, which are at a two-decade high, were doing their job but said moving too soon could be "quite disruptive" for the world's top economy.

But if the economy continues to evolve as expected, most Fed participants still expect it will be "appropriate to begin lowering the policy rate at some point this year". 

Evercore's Krishna Guha said: "Powell says recent data has not materially changed the picture.

"We read this as confirming that the spasm of concern in markets that the economy might be too strong for the Fed to cut in June was overdone — and the base case remains June and three cuts this year."

Confidence among traders was given an extra lift by figures showing a slowdown in growth in the services sector and a sharp drop in input costs during March, suggesting an easing of inflation.

That contrasted with a stronger-than-expected reading of US manufacturing and prices paid earlier this week, which sparked questions about the Fed's rate-cutting timeline.

A report pointing to a further slowdown in eurozone inflation gave confidence an extra boost.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq rose on Wall Street, and most of Asia followed suit.

Tokyo, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore and Jakarta were all in the green, though there were small losses in Manila and Wellington.

Hong Kong and Shanghai were closed for the holidays.

Traders are now looking forward to the release of US jobs data, which is due Friday, and could have a bearing on the Fed's plans. 

A big miss on the downside could boost hopes for a June rate cut, though a forecast-beating read would likely spark a sell-off in markets.

Gold hit another record, $2,304.96 per ounce, according to Bloomberg News, after Powell's remarks, with geopolitical concerns fuelled by the Middle East crisis and Ukraine war.

And oil was sitting around five-month highs owing to worries about Israel's battle with Hamas and Iran's warning to retaliate over a blast at a consular annexe in Damascus that killed seven Revolutionary Guards, including two generals. Tehran blames Israel.

A call by OPEC+ call for its members to maintain its strategy of reducing output also helped push up prices.

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Posted on: 2024-04-04T09:14:28+05:00