Markets

Asian stocks gain on drop in US inflation rate

  • South Korea's ​chipmaker-heavy KOSPI surged 6% in early trade and Japan's Nikkei rose 0.4%. MSCI's broadest index ​of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.7%
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SINGAPORE: Asian markets were higher on Wednesday after a surprise slowdown in U.S. inflation scaled back market expectations for interest rate hikes, while oil took a breather as the US ​scrapped a plan to levy shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

Stellar earnings at Wall ‌Street banks also had investors cheering, though a 25% drop in IBM’s share price, after the technology company’s revenue forecast missed analyst expectations, showed how stretched and skittish the market’s rally in AI-related stocks has become.

South Korea’s ​chipmaker-heavy KOSPI surged 6% in early trade and Japan’s Nikkei rose 0.4%. MSCI’s broadest index ​of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.7%.

In currencies, the US dollar dropped ⁠except against the stubbornly weak yen. Meanwhile, short-end bonds rallied, taking two-year Treasury yields down 11 ​basis points to 4.19% from Tuesday’s 17-month high of nearly 4.3%.

The US headline consumer price index fell ​0.4% in June, its first decline since the COVID-19 pandemic, while annualised core inflation of 2.6% compared with expectations for 2.8%.

“For market bulls this is even better than Goldilocks could have imagined,” J.P. Morgan analysts said in a ​client note.

“Inflation (is) lower with positive earnings growth. This print should remove any fears over a ​July rate hike and may assuage fears on September, too. This sets up the market to move higher and ‌to ⁠broaden as it does so.”

Market pricing for the chance of a U.S. interest rate hike in July halved to 16%.

The euro steadied above $1.14 and the Australian dollar was hanging on to a 0.8% gain and testing $0.70.

Brent crude futures steadied around $85.50 a barrel, having gained more than 12% this week ​on a flare-up in ​Middle East fighting.

U.S. President ⁠Donald Trump reimposed a naval blockade of Iranian ports on Tuesday and threatened to attack power plants and bridges next week unless Iran resumes negotiations ​to end their conflict, though he scrapped a plan for a 20% ​fee on ⁠shipping through Hormuz.

Overnight the Nasdaq rose 0.9% and the S&P 500 climbed 0.4%. U.S. futures , were slightly higher on Wednesday.

Chinese gross domestic product, industrial production and retail sales data will be in focus during ⁠Asian ​trade ahead of earnings for Europe’s most valuable company, ASML, ​the world’s biggest supplier of equipment used to make AI chips.

In the US, BNY, Johnson & Johnson and Blackrock report earnings ​before the morning bell and United Airlines after market close.


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