Money
Asia shares slip, testing times for UK bonds
Concerns about financial stability added to the corrosive mix with all eyes on UK bonds now that the Bank of England’s emergency buying spree is over. — Reuters pic

SYDNEY, Oct 17 — Asian share markets slipped today following another drubbing for Wall Street as investors brace for a further drastic tightening in global financial conditions, with all the risks of recession that brings.

Concerns about financial stability added to the corrosive mix with all eyes on UK bonds now that the Bank of England’s (BoE’s) emergency buying spree is over.

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Prime Minister Liz Truss’ decision to fire her finance minister might help reassure investors, but her own fate is unclear with media reporting Tory lawmakers will try and replace her this week.

BoE Governor Andrew Bailey warned over the weekend that rates might have to rise by more than thought just a couple of months ago.

"The BoE was doing emergency bond-buying that’s technically identical to QE with one hand, while furiously raising the policy rate with the other,” said analysts at ANZ in a note.

"Monday’s market action will provide a test, not only for the survival of Truss’ low-tax vision, but also her political future.”

Sterling was quoted up 0.6 per cent at US$1.1233 (RM5.30), but trading was sparse with little liquidity in Asia. FTSE futures fell 0.5 per cent, and EUROSTOXX 50 futures 0.6 per cent.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan eased 1.2 per cent and back toward last week’s 2-1/2 year low.

Japan’s Nikkei shed 1.5 per cent and South Korea 0.1 per cent. Chinese blue chips dipped 0.6 per cent ahead of GDP data due today.

S&P 500 futures edged up 0.5 per cent after Friday’s sharp retreat, while Nasdaq futures added 0.4 per cent.

While the S&P is an eye-watering 25 per cent off its peak, BofA economist Jared Woodard warned the slide was not over given the world was transitioning from two decades of 2 per cent inflation to a time of something more like 5 per cent inflation.

"US$70 trillion of ‘new’ tech, growth, and government bond assets priced for a 2 per cent world are vulnerable to these secular shifts as ‘old’ industries like energy and materials surge, reversing decades of under-investment,” he wrote in a note.

"Rotating out of 60/40 proxies and buying what is scarce — power, food, energy — is the best way for investors to diversify.”

Intervention watch

A red-hot US consumer price report and rising inflation expectations have markets fully expecting the Federal Reserve to hike rates by 75 basis points next month, and likely by the same again in December.

A host of Fed policymakers are speaking this week, so there will be plenty of opportunity for hawkish headlines. The earnings season also continues with Tesla Inc, Netflix and Johnson & Johnson reporting, among others.

In China, the Communist Party Congress is expected to grant a third term to President Xi Jinping, while there could be a reshuffle of top economic roles as incumbents are near retirement age or term-limits.

In currency markets, the dollar remains king as investors price in US rates peaking around 5 per cent.

The yen has been particularly hard hit as the Bank of Japan sticks to its super-easy policy, while authorities refrained from intervention last week even as the dollar sped past the 148.00 level to 32-year peaks.

Early today, the dollar was up at ¥148.59 and heading for the next target at 150.00.

The euro was holding at US$0.9745, having put in a steadier performance last week, while the US dollar index eased a fraction to 113.20.

The rise of the dollar and global bond yields has been a drag for gold, which was stuck at US$1,650 an ounce.

Oil prices were trying to bounce, after sinking more than 6 per cent last week as fears of a demand slowdown outweighed Opec’s plans to cut output.

Brent firmed 64 cents to US$92.27 a barrel, while US crude rose 57 cents to US$86.18 per barrel. — Reuters

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