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Asian Stocks Mixed, Inflation Guessing Game Continues

Published 05/05/2021, 10:47 PM
Updated 05/05/2021, 10:54 PM
© Reuters.

By Gina Lee

Investing.com – Asia Pacific stocks were mixed Thursday morning as major markets returned from long holidays and the debate about whether the ongoing economic recovery will cause runaway inflation continues.

China’s Shanghai Composite was down 0.24% by 10:45 PM ET (2:45 AM GMT) and the Shenzhen Component was down 0.92% as markets re-opened after a week-long holiday and the country will release the Caixin Services Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) and trade data for April on Friday.

Diplomats from the Group of Seven (G7) nations expressed concern about China’s stance on issues including climate change. “We encourage China, as a major power and economy with advanced technological capability, to participate constructively in the rules-based international system,” the diplomats added in a statement ahead of June’s G7 leaders’ meeting.

Investors are also looking to the resumption of U.S.-China trade talks to assess the implementation of their phase one trade deal, with implications for the current U.S. tariffs on China. U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai on Wednesday said she expects to resume talks with Chinese officials “in the near term.”

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index was up 0.30%.

Japanese and Korean markets also re-opened after holidays, with the Nikkei 225 jumping 1.98% and the KOSPI gaining 0.55%.

In Australia, the ASX 200 fell 0.51%, as the country’s New South Wales state reported new COVID-19 cases.

Meanwhile, Wednesday’s Institute of Supply Management (ISM) Non-Manufacturing PMI for April disappointed, coming in at 62.7. Further economic data, in the form of the U.S. employment report, including non-farm payrolls, is due on Friday.

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The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield edged higher as trading started in Asia.

The U.S. plans to sell $126 billion worth of long-dated bonds in the upcoming week’s refunding exercise. The target amount is unchanged from the previous quarter, suggesting that U.S. financing needs could have already peaked.

As the world’s largest economy rebounds, investors are increasingly focused on when the U.S. Federal Reserve might start throttling back its emergency support.

Investors are increasingly expecting that the central bank will slow the pace of bond purchases in the fourth quarter. Although Fed Chairman Jerome Powell still insists it is too early to discuss such a move, some officials have been more direct.

Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren stirred the debate on whether the Fed could start tapering its monthly bond purchases after suggesting that the U.S. mortgage market now requires less support.

“The housing market is quite strong right now and housing prices have been going up... so the need for buying mortgage-backed securities at the pace that we have been doing probably is not nearly as needed as it was much earlier in the recovery,” he told Bloomberg.

Across the Atlantic, the Bank of England will hand down its policy decision later in the day.

Latest comments

Its mixed because the funds are slowly pulling out while naive retailers catch the falling knife. Yellen slipped and told the world already
Leftists blame capitalism for issues in society, but the rise in cost of living is due to the government. There is a reason why California, the most blue state in the country, has rise in cost of living up to 85% higher than the national average. There is a reason why with capitalism people complain about there being too many rich people, and with socialism/communism people complain about there being too many poor people.
Leftists blame capitalism for issues in society, but the rise in cost of living is due to the government. There is a reason why California, the most blue state in the country, has rise in cost of living up to 85% higher than the national average.
Using CPI, what $1 could buy in 1990 can only buy $0.48 worth of goods today. Around 40% of the total supply of USD was printed in the past year to bail the government out of the mess it created with fearmonger and lockdowns over COVID, while doing nothing that proved to be helpful or useful. Whatever you think inflation is, it is higher. A recent government audit revealed that the actual US national debt as of q4 2020 is closer to $120 trillion, not $30 trillion as the treasury reports. There is a reason people are so disgusted by fiat they are buying things like DOGE that are openly jokes. People are mocking the fiat system, and the government only has itself to blame.
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