Money - International
Asian stocks drop as Fed shift reverberates; Treasury yields slide
An investor looks at an electronic board showing stock information at a brokerage house in Shanghai, China, January 18, 2016. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

TOKYO, June 21 — Asian stocks dropped today as investors mulled the implications of a surprise hawkish shift last week by the US Federal Reserve, while the Treasury yield curve flattened further with 30-year yields dropping below 2 per cent.

Japan’s Nikkei led declines with a 3.3 per cent drop and dipped below 28,000 for the first time in a month, while MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 1 per cent in early trading.

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Chinese blue chips opened 0.4 per cent lower, and Australia’s benchmark slid 1.8 per cent.

Benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields fell to the lowest since early March at 1.4110 per cent, while those on 30-year bonds slid as low as 1.9990 per cent for the first time in more than four months.

The yield curve — measured by the spread between two — and 30-year yields — was the flattest since early February.

The US dollar hovered near the 10-week high touched on Friday versus major peers, following its biggest weekly advance in more than a year.

"The story of last week was arguably the one-way move in the USD, which morphed into a clear de-grossing through equity markets, with the ‘value’ parts of the market really getting clobbered,” Chris Weston, the head of research at Pepperstone Markets Ltd, a foreign exchange broker based in Melbourne, wrote in a client note.

"It feels that the pain trade is for further strength in the USD, higher real rates, and a flatter Treasury curve, with the market continuing to see the reflation trades unwound.”

Shares of banks, energy firms and other companies that tend to be sensitive to the economy’s fluctuations have fallen sharply following the Fed’s meeting on Wednesday, when the central bank caught investors off guard by anticipating two quarter-percentage-point rate increases in 2023 amid a recent surge in inflation.

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard further fuelled the sell-off on Friday by saying the shift toward faster policy tightening was a "natural” response to economic growth and particularly inflation moving quicker than expected as the country reopens from the coronavirus pandemic.

Several Fed officials have speaking duties this week, including Chair Jerome Powell, who testifies before Congress tomorrow.

The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 45 nations, fell another 0.2 per cent today, extending its retreat from a record intraday high reached Tuesday.

US stock futures pointed to further selling when Wall Street reopens, easing 0.2 per cent after Friday’s 1.3 per cent slide in the S&P 500.

In commodities, gold rebounded 0.6 per cent to US$1,773.12 (RM7,348.70) an ounce today, looking to snap a six-day losing streak, but still remained near the lowest since early May, pressured by a stronger dollar.

Crude oil rose for a second day, with the initial move triggered by Opec sources saying the producer group expected limited US oil output growth this year despite rising prices.

Brent crude futures rose 46 cents to US$73.97 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose 55 cents to US$72.19 a barrel. — Reuters

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