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Asian shares extend global selloff amid bets on more aggressive Fed

Stella Qiu (Reuters)
Sydney, Australia
Wed, September 14, 2022

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Asian shares extend global selloff amid bets on more aggressive Fed Passersby wearing protective face masks, following an outbreak of the coronavirus, walk past in front of an electric screen displaying Nikkei share average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan March 2, 2020. REUTERS/Issei Kato (REUTERS/Issei Kato)

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sian shares tumbled, the dollar held firm and two-year Treasury yields hit a new 15-year high on Wednesday, as a US inflation report dashed hopes for a peak in inflation, fueling bets rates may have to be raised higher for longer.

US Labor Department data showed on Tuesday the headline Consumer Price Index gained 0.1 percent on a monthly basis versus expectations for a 0.1 percent decline. In particular, core inflation, stripping out volatile food and energy prices, doubled to 0.6 percent.

Wall Street saw its steepest fall in two years, the safe-haven dollar posted its biggest jump since early 2020, and two-year Treasury yields, which rise with traders' expectations of higher Fed fund rates, jumped to the highest level in 15 years.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 2.1 percent on Wednesday, dragged lower by a 2.7 percent plunge in resources-heavy Australia, a 2.4 percent drop in Hong Kong's Hang Seng index and a 1 percent fall in Chinese blue chips.

Japan's Nikkei tumbled 2.3 percent.

After a heavy equity selloff overnight, both the S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures rose 0.3 percent. On Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 3.94 percent, the S&P 500 lost 4.2 percent, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 5.16 percent.

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"Markets have reacted violently to what I would consider to be a modest miss in US CPI," said Scott Rundell, chief investment officer at Mutual Limited.

"Futures have stabilized, so we might see a dead-cat bounce tonight."

Financial markets now have fully priced in an interest rate hike of at least 75 basis points at the conclusion of the FOMC's policy meeting next week, with a 38 percent probability of a super-sized, full-percentage-point increase to the Fed funds target rate, according to CME's tool.

A day earlier, the probability of a 100-bps hike was zero.

"USD rates are now pricing in a Fed funds rate of 4.25 percent by end-2022 (75bps, 75bps, 25bps for the remaining three meetings). Decent odds of a 4.5 percent peak early 2023 is also reflected," said Eugene Leow, senior rates strategist at Deutsche Bank.

"While resilient growth and slowing inflation can make for a better risk-taking environment, the US economy now looks too hot still. With no clear signs of the labor market slowing and inflation still problematic, a downshift from the Fed looks set to be delayed again."

In the currency markets, the US dollar held firm against a basket of major currencies at 109.8, after jumping 1.4 percent overnight on the surprisingly strong US inflation report.

It hovered close to its 24-year peak against the rate-sensitive Japanese yen at 144.4 yen. The yen has been a victim of the dovish monetary stance from the Bank of Japan, in contrast with rate hikes elsewhere.

The two-year US Treasury yield scaled a new 15-year high of 3.8040 percent on Friday before retreating to 3.777 percent, and its curve gap with the benchmark ten-year yields hovering around 34 basis points, compared with just 16 bps a week ago.

The yield curve inversion is usually treated as a warning of recession.

The yield on 10-year Treasury notes rose to 3.4273 percent compared with its US close of 3.423 percent on Tuesday.

Oil prices recovered some ground on Friday, after falling in the previous session. US crude settled up 0.3 percent at $87.57 per barrel and Brent settled at $93.38, up 0.2 percent on the day.

Gold was slightly higher. Spot gold was traded at $1701.7526 per ounce.

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