HONG KONG, April 30 — Markets mostly rose today following advances on Wall Street, while the yen held gains after the previous day’s sharp swings and focus turned to the Federal Reserve’s upcoming policy decision.
A forecast-beating series of earnings from top-tier firms in recent weeks, particularly tech titans including Alphabet and Microsoft, has been a key driver of the latest advances, offsetting fading hopes for a US interest rate cut this year.
While the Fed is widely expected to stand pat on borrowing costs after its meeting tomorrow, its statement and boss Jerome Powell’s comments will be pored over for clues about their plans for the rest of the year.
Traders have been lowering their expectations since the start of 2024 for how many reductions the bank will make as inflation continues to hold above target and various indicators show the economy and labour market remain in rude health.
Still, investors have largely come to terms with the fact that interest rates will remain elevated for an extended period and are taking heart from the strong corporate reports.
"Earnings results may bring clarity, but monetary policy remains hazy,” said Nuveen’s Saira Malik. "Recent macroeconomic data and cautious central bank rhetoric have been signalling a need to delay rate cuts, a trend that was reinforced on Friday” with above-forecast US inflation figures.
Closely watched jobs data is due to be released at the end of the week, while Apple, Coca-Cola and Pfizer are pencilled in to announce quarterly earnings.
Asian markets were largely higher today, though profit-taking after a recent run-up pared the morning’s healthy gains.
Hong Kong rose for a seventh successive day, while Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Wellington, Mumbai, Bangkok and Jakarta were also up.
Shanghai, Taipei and Manila edged down.
London edged up in the morning but Frankfurt dipped.
Paris was flat after data showed the French economy grew more than expected in the first quarter and inflation slowed this month.
News that China’s April factory activity grew more than expected — even if at a slower pace than last month — also provided some support.
Tokyo piled on more than one per cent as it played catch-up with Asia’s gains yesterday, which was a Japanese holiday.
The yen weakened slightly but held much of the previous day’s surge that observers speculate came on the back of an intervention by authorities after it hit a fresh 34-year low of 160.17.
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and top currency official Masato Kanda declined to comment Tuesday on whether the government had acted.
Kanda reiterated that Japanese officials were ready to step in if there were wild speculative movements.
The unit was sitting at around 156.80, having rallied to 154.54 at one point yesterday.
Traders are on guard for further volatility in the pairing after the Bank of Japan decided against shifting further from its ultra-loose monetary policy last week and gave little idea about when it would.
That makes the Fed’s meeting even more crucial, with observers warning that a more hawkish tilt could see the dollar spike again, though many warn the yen will likely hit 160 again owing to the wide differences in the central banks’ monetary policies.
"Going back to 160 again is pretty much in sight, unless the macroeconomic situation changes,” said Yusuke Miyairi of Nomura International.
He added that "the market is not too afraid of fighting the (Ministry of Finance) in terms of the currency”.
Oil prices edged up after sinking more than one per cent yesterday on hopes for a possible ceasefire in Gaza, with US President Joe Biden said to be calling for Egypt and Qatar to "exert all efforts” towards securing the release of hostages held by Hamas as part of negotiations.
Hamas is expected to respond to a proposal for a second truce in Gaza, coupled with a fresh release of hostages. — AFP
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