Most Asian markets slipped yesterday following last week’s broad advances, with the dollar suffering fresh selling pressure after the Federal Reserve hinted at a slower-than-expected pace of interest rate hikes this year.
With few events to drive buying, investors took a step back following a recent rally across global trading floors while there is a nagging fear that President Donald Trump’s promised tax cuts and spending splurge could come later than hoped.
“Positive catalysts to further moves higher appear to be lacking at the moment,” said Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrader, in a note. “The delay on the details of (Trump’s) tax plan is a risk for stocks if US data starts to disappoint.”
Wall Street provided a damp lead with the Dow and S&P 500 ending lower Friday.
In Asian trade Hong Kong rose 0.8% to levels not seen since August 2015 and Shanghai edged up 0.4% but Sydney shed 0.4%, Seoul also gave back 0.4% and Singapore was 0.5% lower.
Wellington tumbled 1.4%, hit by a 10% dive in market giant Fletcher Building, which cut its profit forecast citing huge losses on a key construction project. Japanese markets were closed for a public holiday.
In foreign exchanges the dollar was down against most other currencies after the Fed on Wednesday lifted borrowing costs as expected but pointed to another two rises this year, confounding talk of a possible three or four.
The greenback retreated against the yen and euro as well as most other high-yielding currencies including the Australian dollar, South Korean won, Thai baht and Indonesia’s rupiah.
“The less hawkish stance by the Fed has opened the door for local (emerging market) trade, even more so with the stronger-than-expected Chinese data last week, adding to the global dollar squeeze,” said OANDA senior trader Stephen Innes. Adding to market unease were concerns about Trump’s plans for global trade after his Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin refused to renew past anti-protectionist pledges at a G20 gathering.
Commitments of support to the existing multilateral trade system, including the World Trade Organisation, were also conspicuously missing from the final communique from the finance ministers’ gathering at the weekend.
The move follows Trump’s warnings to throw up levies and revise global agreements he says are unfair to the United States. In Mumbai Idea Cellular reversed an early rally to sink 7% after announcing it would merge with British telecoms giant Vodafone’s Indian unit to make the country’s biggest operator.
The news followed months of speculation they were ready to sign a deal to help fend off Reliance Jio, whose recent arrival has shaken up India’s ultra-competitive mobile network market.
In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng closed up 0.8% to 24,501.99 points and Shanghai – Composite edged up 0.4% to 3,250.81 points at the close yesterday.



Related Story