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Asian stocks down after inconclusive US midterms

AFP
Hong Kong, China
Thu, November 10, 2022 Published on Nov. 10, 2022 Published on 2022-11-10T10:21:05+07:00

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Asian stocks down after inconclusive US midterms Traffic moves slowly during the evening rush hour (left lanes) making its way from Roppongi in the direction of the Shibuya area of Tokyo on Nov. 8, 2022. (AFP/Richard A. Brooks)

A

sian stocks started down on Thursday after inconclusive US midterm election results and a turbulent cryptocurrency market left Wall Street and European markets in a sea of red.

The uncertainty, especially about how the midterm results would impact inflation, transferred to Asia overnight.

Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Seoul, Jakarta and Taipei were all trading lower.

"A purple dilemma might be the best way to describe the red-blue tangle that emerged Wednesday. It'll be gridlock, that's for sure," Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said of the US midterms.

"Perhaps not the friendliest kind for market participants, many of whom were hoping for a more resounding rebuke of Democrats given inflation realities." 

All eyes are expected to turn to US inflation data, due later Thursday, to gauge the speed of future rate hikes by the Federal Reserve. 

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"US growth looks still too strong to bring inflation down," Tapas Strickland of National Australia Bank said in a note.

"The ongoing resilience in the (consumer prices) data and stickiness in inflation continue to point to the Fed hiking rates closer to 5.0 percent or higher." 

Fed officials have raised their policy rate to a range of between 3.75 to 4.0 percent.

Markets in Asia were already grappling with the impact of strict zero-COVID measures in China, with supply chains and activity slowed by harsh lockdowns and testing policies. 

"China's domestic demand is weak and their key trading partners are entering recession territory," said Edward Moya from Oanda. 

"China is also continuing to struggle with COVID as Guangzhou has to return to mass testing." 

The crypto world was also rocked by a surprise decision from Binance, the world's biggest cryptocurrency platform, to scrap a possible acquisition of rival FTX.com a day after disclosing it had signed a non-binding letter of intent to buy it.

The near-collapse of FTX has plunged bitcoin to a two-year low.

"You can't deny the growing correlation between bitcoin and risk assets," said Innes.

"The FTX news is having an outsized effect on asset prices," he said, adding that "all ships were sinking on the crypto tumult."

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