Asian Shares Mixed As Traders Scale Back Fed Rate Cut Bets

RTTNews | 1 dag sedan
Asian Shares Mixed As Traders Scale Back Fed Rate Cut Bets

(RTTNews) - Asian stocks were mixed on Wednesday as fresh signs of a resilient U.S. economy clouded the outlook for U.S. rate cuts in 2025.

Treasuries were steady after falling across the curve in the previous session. The U.S. government's monthly auction of 10-year notes drew the highest yield since 2007 after the release of upbeat U.S. service-sector activity and job openings data.

The dollar stood tall and the Japanese yen sagged close to levels that drew intervention last year, while gold was little changed below $2,650 per ounce on hawkish FOMC rate outlook.

Fed Bank of Atlanta President Raphael Bostic said on Tuesday that officials should be cautious with policy decisions, given uneven progress on lowering inflation.

Oil traded higher amid signs of reduced supplies from Russia and OPEC members and industry data showing another drop in U.S. inventories.

China's Shanghai Composite index dropped 0.3 percent as the yuan fell to its lowest level since September 2023 despite renewed efforts by the country's central bank to support the currency.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng index dipped half a percent. According to a Bloomberg report, banks such as HSBC Holdings and Standard Chartered are hoarding cash and liquidity despite calls by the government to help out struggling small businesses with funding.

Japan's Nikkei was down 0.4 percent, with tech stocks such as Advantest and Tokyo Electron surging despite a sell-off in U.S. tech stocks overnight, led by Nvidia as a product presentation by the company left investors wanting more.

South Korea's Kospi average was up more than 1 percent, led by tech and healthcare stocks. Samsung Electronics jumped 2.7 percent despite its profit outlook falling far short of expectations.

Australia's benchmark S&P/ASX 200 was up 0.6 percent as a drop in core inflation rate bolstered the case for a cut in interest rates by RBA as early as next month.

Across the Tasman, New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX-50 index was marginally higher. U.S. stocks fell overnight as inflation and interest rate concerns returned to the fore after the release of upbeat economic data.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite slumped 1.9 percent, the S&P 500 lost 1.1 percent and the narrower Dow shed 0.4 percent as the yield on the benchmark ten-year note surged to an eight-month high.

U.S. service sector growth picked up in December, a measure of prices paid for inputs rose to near a two-year high, and job openings unexpectedly increased in November, prompting traders to push back their expectations on when the Fed can cut interest rates this year.

European stocks closed mostly higher on Tuesday despite data showing that inflation in the eurozone rose to its highest level in five months for December.

The pan European STOXX 600 gained 0.3 percent. The German DAX and France's CAC 40 both rose by 0.6 percent while the U.K.'s FTSE 100 finished marginally lower.

read more
JCPenney, Sparc Group Merge To Form Catalyst Brands

JCPenney, Sparc Group Merge To Form Catalyst Brands

Department store chain JCPenney announced that it has merged with SPARC Group, a full-service retail enterprise operating Aéropostale, Eddie Bauer, and Forever 21, among others, to launch a new organization, Catalyst Brands. The combination brings together six iconic American retail brands under a unified powerhouse portfolio.
RTTNews | 6h 27minuter sedan
European Economic News Preview: Germany Industrial Output, Trade Data Due

European Economic News Preview: Germany Industrial Output, Trade Data Due

Industrial production and foreign trade from Germany and retail sales from the euro area are the top economic news due on Thursday. At 2.00 am ET, Destatis is slated to issue Germany's industrial output and trade figures. Exports are expected to rebound 2.0 percent on month in November and imports to climb 0.7 percent.
RTTNews | 7h 56minuter sedan
China Inflation Eases To 0.1%; PPI Continues To Drop

China Inflation Eases To 0.1%; PPI Continues To Drop

China's consumer price inflation softened further in December and producer prices declined for 27 consecutive months despite Beijing initiating stimulus measures to revive domestic demand. Consumer prices grew only 0.1 percent on a yearly basis in December, slower than the 0.2 percent increase seen in November, figures from the National Bureau of Statistics revealed on Thursday.
RTTNews | 8h 3minuter sedan