Asian Stocks Set for Soft Start as Fed Doubts Simmer – Markets Close


(Bloomberg) — Most Asian stocks will fall early Monday as traders manage expectations of Federal Reserve easing and come to terms with the cost of the president’s proposed fiscal and trade policies. elected Donald Trump.

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Australian shares fell while share futures in Japan and mainland China pointed to losses. Contracts in Hong Kong rose. US futures were steady after the S&P 500 fell 1.3% on Friday to erase more than half of its gains following the US election.

A soft start risks extending last week’s global selloff as investors weigh the prospect that Trump’s tariffs and tax cuts could reignite inflation in an already strong U.S. economy. Views are emerging that the Federal Reserve could pause its easing cycle in 2025, and the odds of a rate cut next month are now seen as less than a coin toss.

“Another Fed cut in December is still likely, but it is now close,” Shane Oliver, chief economist at AMP Ltd. in Sydney, wrote in a note to clients. “A slower pace of easing is likely next year, especially given that Trump’s policies on tariffs and further tax cuts pose some upside threats to inflation over a one- to three-year outlook. “.

The dollar was steady against its major peers in early trading after rising 1.4% last week, a seventh consecutive weekly gain, as Treasury yields rose on reduced expectations about the Federal Reserve policy. The measures, coupled with concerns about Chinese growth, have devastated everything from the Australian dollar to emerging market bonds. Asian stocks fell 3.9% last week, their worst sell-off in about six months.

In commodities, oil fell while gold rose. Ukraine’s allies are pressing Volodymyr Zelenskiy to consider new ways to end the war with Russia as the United States mulls a final decision to lift some restrictions on Western-made weapons to attack limited military targets in Russia.

In Asia on Monday, traders will be watching Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda’s speech and press conference for clues on the central bank’s next policy move after officials expressed concern about the rapid weakening of the yen. Markets are pricing in about 14 basis points of rate hikes in December, according to swaps data compiled by Bloomberg, ahead of this week’s inflation data.

“Ueda’s press conference should be the main focus this week in assessing the timing of the BOJ’s next rate hike,” Barclays strategists led by Themistoklis Fiotakis wrote in a note to clients. “USD/JPY could remain under upward pressure in the near term due to Trump and yen carry trades, but will likely rise more slowly as it approaches 160 on concerns about currency intervention and positioning for currency increases. faster rates.

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