Battle vs inflation sparks global jitters
The euro continued to struggle with political uncertainty in Europe fueled by shock EU election results, though the bloc’s equities rebounded after two days of losses
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Worries about upcoming US inflation data and the Federal Reserve’s outlook for interest rates permeated Asian trading floors Wednesday.
The euro continued to struggle with political uncertainty in Europe fueled by shock EU election results, though the bloc’s equities rebounded after two days of losses.
The Philippine Stock Exchange was closed yesterday in observance of Independence Day.
While a surge in Apple helped Wall Street reach another record, investors are growing increasingly nervous that the US central bank will hold off on cutting borrowing costs for an extended period as officials determine if prices have been brought under control.
Small area to maneuver
Forecasts for the number of reductions the Fed will make in 2024 have been whittled down from six at the start of the year to just three at best now, following a string of figures indicating the labor market remains solid and the economy still in rude health.
Confidence took another blow Friday when the closely watched non-farm payrolls report came in far above expectations.
Focus is now on data due later Wednesday on last month’s consumer price index, which eased in April after three straight above-estimate readings.
That will be followed by the conclusion of the Fed’s latest policy meeting.
The bank is widely expected to stand pat on rates but its “dot plot” guidance, which shows officials’ outlook for rates this year, is the main event. The last report tipped three cuts but speculation is swirling that bank boss Jerome Powell and others could reduce it further.
Anthony Saglimbene at Ameriprise said: “We expect Fed Chair Powell and company to maintain a position that stresses potential rate cuts remain contingent on the committee seeing further progress made on bringing down price pressures.”
However, Dennis DeBusschere at financial services group 22V Research tipped the Fed to cut this year.
He said a study had found “63 percent of investors believe that the Fed will first cut because of a soft landing and that inflation is on a Fed-friendly path toward sub-three percent.”
“So, there will be a cut because policy doesn’t need to be as restrictive,” he said.
Equity traders in Asia trod a cautious line, brushing off a record for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq in New York.
Tokyo, Hong Kong, Sydney, Wellington and Jakarta fell, while Shanghai, Singapore, Seoul, Mumbai, Bangkok and Taipei rose.