economy

Asia stocks on tenterhooks as Fed faces crunch time

SYDNEY: Asian stocks made a cautious start on Monday in a week that is almost certain to see the start of an easing cycle in the United States with the only question mark being the size of the cut, with markets split on the chance of an outsized move.

Central banks in Japan and the UK also meet this week, with both expected to stand pat for now, while a packed data schedule includes U.S. retail sales and industrial production.

Geopolitics loomed large as ever with Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump the subject of a second assassination attempt on Sunday according to the FBI.

Holidays in China, Japan, South Korea and Indonesia made for thin conditions and early moves were modest. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was almost flat, after bouncing 0.8 per cent last week.

Japan's Nikkei was shut but futures traded at 36,490 compared to a cash close of 36,581 as recent yen gains pressured exporters. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures were both a fraction firmer.

Economic data from China over the weekend disappointed as industrial output growth slowed to a five-month low in August, while retail sales and new home prices weakened further.

"The data bolsters the case for additional economic stimulus by year-end if China wants to achieve its target of around 5 per cent growth in 2024," said Vivek Dhar, a mining & energy analyst at CBA.

"We think policymakers will look to boost central government spending on infrastructure projects if both China's property and infrastructure sectors sink again in September."

Futures imply a 52 per cent chance the Federal Reserve would cut rates by 50 basis points on Wednesday with the odds narrowing sharply after media reports revived the prospect of a more aggressive easing. 

"We agree it is likely to be a close call, but we also believe the Fed will make the 'right' move and go 50bp," said JPMorgan economist Michael Feroli.

"The case for a 50bp cut seems clear to us: various iterations of a Taylor Rule imply policy is currently a full percentage point or more too restrictive," he added.

If the Fed does go by half a point, Feroli expects policy makers to also project 100 basis points of cuts this year and 150 basis points for 2025.

The market has 114 basis points of easing priced in by Christmas and another 142 basis points for next year.

 

YEN ON A ROLL

Analysts at ANZ noted that in the last three decades there have been three easing cycles that started off with a cut of more than 25bp, but in each there were concerns about a market rout leading to recession, which is not the case now.

Just the chance of an aggressive move saw bonds rally broadly, with two-year Treasury yields down at 3.593 per cent having scored the lowest close since September 2022.

The Bank of England is generally expected to leave rates on hold at 5.00 per cent when it meets on Thursday, though markets have priced in a 31 per cent chance of another cut.

The Bank of Japan meets on Friday and is widely expected to hold steady, though it may lay the groundwork for a further tightening in October.

South Africa's central bank is also tipped to ease policy this week, while Norway is seen holding steady.

The drop in Treasury yields has boosted the yen against the dollar, which stood at 140.82 yen having slipped 0.9 per cent last week to a near nine-month trough.

The euro was steady at US$1.1086, with the prospect of more rate cuts from the European Central Bank keeping a lid on the currency at US$1.1200.

The Canadian dollar held at 1.3580 per U.S. dollar after Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem opened the door to faster rate cuts in an interview with the Financial Times.

Lower bond yields underpinned gold, which stood at US$2,579 an ounce and near an all-time peak of US$2,585.99.

Oil prices edged up as nearly a fifth of crude oil production in the Gulf of Mexico remained offline.

Brent rose 19 cents to US$71.78 a barrel, while US crude firmed 28 cents to US$68.93 per barrel.

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