Asia shares dragged by Wall Street dive, bonds bullish

As investors avoided risk assets for safer harbors, Asian share markets slumped on Monday ( Sep 9 ) after worries about a potential US economic downturn weighed on Wall Street.

As manufacturers were under pressure from a stronger yen, Japan’s Nikkei lost 2.4 percent on top of a nearly 6 % decline last year.

MSCI’s broadest score of Asia-Pacific stock outside Japan slipped 0.6 per share, after losing 2.25 per cent last year.

S&amp, P 500 prospects and Nasdaq prospects were both a tenth lower, after Friday’s slip.

Fed finance prospects remained unchanged as investors speculated whether the Fed’s decision to cut rates by an additional 50 basis points at its meeting next week would be sufficient.

Markets currently suggest that there is only a 29 % chance of a significant cut, in part due to Friday’s comments from Fed Governor Christopher Waller and New York Fed President John Williams, though Waller did leave the door open for more drastic easing.

According to Barclays analyst Christian Keller, “our view of the data is that the labor market continues to cool, but we see no indication of the kind of swift decay in conditions that may call for a 50bp level reduce.”

” Significantly, we also see no sign of any taste for this in Fed contacts”, he added. We continue to urge the Fed to start its routine with a 25 bp cut, followed by two more 25 bp cuts at the remaining two meetings this time, and a total of 75 bp cuts for the following year.

Buyers are significantly more dovish, with 127 base points of easing projected for 2025 and 115 basis points of easing projected for Christmas.

The release of information on August US consumer prices on Wednesday should support the need for a cut, if not the size, with headline inflation now down to 2.9 % from 2.9 %.

ECB TO EASE

Markets are also fully prepared for a quarter-point cut from the European Central Bank on Thursday, but they are n’t sure if it will ease in both October and December.

” What matters may be direction beyond September, where there’s strong stress on both attributes”, researchers at TD Securities noted in a statement.

” Income growth and service inflation remain powerful, emboldening the hawks, while progress signals are flagging softer, emboldening the birds”, they added. ” Weekly cuts are probably more consistent with the new estimates”.

Ties were boosted by the prospect of further lowering, with 10-year Bank yields at 15-month highs and two-year yields at their lowest since March 2023.

The 10-year was past at 3.734 per share and the two at 3.661 per share, leaving the curve near its steepest since mid-2022.

The decline in generates sparked a deeper unwinding of japanese carry industries, which saw the money dip as far as 141.75 japanese on Friday before stabilizing at 142.41 early on Monday.

The lira held at US$ 1.1090, having quickly been as high as US$ 1.1155 on Friday.

The Asian giant’s consumer price data ( CPI), which are due later on Monday, is anticipated to reveal that the Asian giant continues to be a cause of inflation, with producer prices projected to decline by 1.4 percent annually in August.

The CPI is forecast to top up to 0.7 per cent for the year, from 0.5 per share, mainly due to rising food costs.

Export and import growth is expected to slow down as a result of the figures for China’s trade account expected on Tuesday.

Also on Tuesday, Democrats Kamala Harris and Donald Trump controversy for the first time before the Nov. 5 presidential vote.

In commodities industry, the drop in bond yields kept metal restrained at US$ 2, 496 an ounce and little of its new all-time leading of US$ 2.531.

Oil prices found some aid after last week’s record regular decline, which was fueled by persistent worries about global need.

Brent added 57 cents to US$ 71.63 a cylinder, while US pure firmed 60 percent to US$ 68.27 per cylinder.