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Asian stocks rally as US inflation data eases rate fears

Asian stocks rally as US inflation data eases rate fears
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March 01, 2024 (MLN): Asian equities and European futures advanced on Friday after US stocks hit records on the back of in-line inflation data, as Bloomberg reported.

Japan’s Nikkei stock benchmark rose as much as 2.1% to an all-time high, nearing the 40,000 mark, after a two-day losing streak.

Chinese, Hong Kong and Australian shares rose. The moves came after the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure on personal consumption expenditures matched forecasts.

“As we look forward to rate cuts this year and we can debate on what the PCE inflation numbers mean, that should be good news for non-US dollar assets, and Asian equities as well, where we still see growth on the ground,” said Pruksa Iamthongthong, Abrdn’s Asia equities senior investment director.

European and US stock futures rose during Asian hours after both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indexes closed at record levels, helped by Nvidia Corp., which also set its highest closing price on the day. The two benchmarks ended February with their fourth consecutive monthly advance.

Treasuries were steady after gaining for two sessions in a row, helped along by jobless claims data that indicated labor-market softening.

Traders also pointed to the possibility that short covering was behind the gains. An index of the dollar was little changed.

The yen weakened against the greenback Friday after Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said its price target is not already in sight.

His comment may temper speculation the bank’s first rate hike since 2007 could come as early as March.

Markets are closed Friday in South Korea for a holiday.

China’s factory activity shrank for the fifth straight month in February, suggesting weak demand remains an obstacle for the economy.

A gauge of non-manufacturing activity was in expansion mode, helped by a pickup in travel and tourism during a recent long holiday.

The country’s home-sales slump dragged on in February, even as regulators stepped up efforts to salvage the beleaguered property market.

The value of new home sales from the 100 biggest real estate companies slid 60% from a year earlier.

Meanwhile, the US PCE report failed to dent the broader disinflationary trend underpinning rate-cut forecasts.

“For markets keenly focused on when the Fed will transition toward easing rates, this report will help restore confidence that it isn’t ‘if’ the Fed will begin to cut rates in 2024, but ‘when,’” said Quincy Krosby at LPL Financial.

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President Mary Daly said central bank officials are ready to lower interest rates as needed but emphasized there’s no urgent need to cut given the strength of the economy. Her Atlanta counterpart Raphael Bostic said the central bank could begin cutting this summer.

The Cleveland Fed’s Loretta Mester said inflation data out Thursday showed that policymakers have more work to do to cool price pressures, but said it didn’t change her expectation that the Fed will cut interest rates three times this year.

Bitcoin held around $61,000 as demand from exchange-traded funds continues. BlackRock Inc.’s iShares Bitcoin Trust netted a record $612 million inflow on Wednesday.

West Texas Intermediate crude rose Friday. The US Energy Information Administration said oil demand touched a four-year high in 2023 and would likely hold near that level this year.

Elsewhere, gold steadied after rising to a three-week high around $2,045 per ounce.

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Posted on: 2024-03-01T12:10:22+05:00