Asian Shares Look Mixed; Treasuries Extend Rally: Markets Wrap
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1970-01-01 08:00
Asian stocks are poised for a mixed opening after Wall Street struggled in the wake of a rally

Asian stocks are poised for a mixed opening after Wall Street struggled in the wake of a rally that put the S&P 500 near “overbought” levels. US trade was dominated by Treasuries which extended their powerful November advance.

Equity futures signal small gains for Japanese and Australian benchmark indexes, while Hong Kong may edge lower. Traders weighed mixed US government debt sales, with a $55 billion auction of five-year bonds seeing strong demand while a $54 billion sale of two-year notes was soft.

Benchmark 10-year yields dropped eight basis points to around 4.4% amid bets the Federal Reserve is done with interest-rate hikes. Australia and New Zealand yields also declined in early trading Tuesday.

Read: Billions Wiped Out as Stock-Safety Trade on Wall Street Misfires

The world’s biggest bond market has clawed its way back after spending chunks of 2023 underwater — heading toward its best month since March. The Bloomberg US Treasury Index recently shifted to a positive return for the year as signs of slowing inflation and measured jobs growth unleashed a rally that sent yields tumbling from their highest in more than a decade.

“The market appears to have embraced the idea that slowing economic data will hasten the arrival of market-friendly rate cuts, even though the Fed has continued to telegraph otherwise,” said Chris Larkin at E*Trade from Morgan Stanley. “This week will provide plenty of opportunities for traders to decide whether that cooling trend is intact.”

Read: Wall Street’s 5,000 Club Grows on S&P 500 Optimism: Surveillance

Traders will be closely watching another batch of economic data this week, including the Fed’s preferred measure of underlying inflation. US sales of new houses fell in October after a downward revision to the prior month as decades-high mortgage rates weighed on demand. The Fed Bank of Dallas manufacturing index for November came in softer than expected.

In Asia, there are signs China’s economic recovery remains fragile, with profits at industrial companies rising at a much slower pace than a month earlier as deflationary pressures persisted. The fallout from a criminal probe into shadow banking giant Zhongzhi Enterprise Group Co. continues, with one lawyer estimating investor losses could reach $56 billion.

Too Placid

Bets that US policymakers are done with the rate-hiking cycle have fueled a rally in the S&P 500 this month, sinking short-term volatility expectations. While some used the opportunity to buy protection on the cheap, it’s been far from ubiquitous — and calls saying the market environment is getting too placid are on the rise.

“The technical backdrop in the stock market right now is critically important,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. “This does not mean that we’re about to see an important top in the stock market. It could just mean that we’ll see a mild pullback or even a ‘sideways’ correction at some point in the next week or two to work off this overbought condition.”

Volatility has collapsed, both the bond and equity markets have stabilized while the dollar has fallen significantly — which should be enough for investors to feel cautiously optimistic, according to Mark Hackett at Nationwide.

Read: Wall Street Goes All-In on Cross-Market Meltup as Bears Retreat

“At this point in the year, the direction of the current market – which is positive – is historically the direction the market finishes the year since there are few indicators that could drastically change its route,” Hackett noted. “But, in order for this to be true, we’ll need to see a ‘goldilocks’ approach from the Fed – not too weak and not too strong on policy.”

More than 60% of respondents in the latest MLIV Pulse survey expect stocks to provide better returns than bonds over the next month. That’s the highest level of excitement about equities that the survey registered since the question about the two assets was first asked in August 2022.

Wall Street forecasters have turned more optimistic about the outlook for next year as investor sentiment improves and expectations of a recession are dialed back.

In earnings, Crowdstrike Holdings Inc. will underscore how businesses are prioritizing cybersecurity after recent high-profile corporate hacks, while Salesforce Inc. and Dell Technologies Inc. are expected to post slower sales growth when they report this week, as overall corporate expenditure tightens.

Elsewhere, gold was back above $2,000. Oil dropped as easing geopolitical tensions and oversupply signals outweighed hopes that OPEC and its allies will deepen production cuts on Thursday.

Corporate Highlights:

Key events this week:

Some of the main moves in markets:

Stocks

Currencies

Cryptocurrencies

Bonds

Commodities

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

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