Stocks rise on Fed easing hopes, yen locked in intervention zone
Asian stocks rose on Thursday and the dollar was soft on growing expectations of an interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve next month, while the yen remained on intervention watch, with traders weighing the prospect of a rate hike before year-end.
A holiday-curtailed week has led to limited moves across markets with stocks keeping a largely upbeat tone and currencies much more sedate as investors shrug off AI bubble worries that had roiled equities earlier in November.
The U.S. markets are closed for the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday and are due to trade for a short session on Friday.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was 0.4% higher, tracking gains from Wall Street and on course to snap a three-week losing streak. Japan's Nikkei and South Korea's Kospi surged over 1%.
Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo, said stocks are responding positively to revived Fed rate cut expectations, which has helped cool recent AI-bubble concerns.
"Into year-end, markets could trade sideways or grind higher, with the Fed’s expected cut and strong seasonality making December a difficult month to be bearish, and a Santa rally still very much on the table."
The Chinese property sector was back in the spotlight after property developer China Vanke sought bondholder approval to delay the repayment of a 2 billion yuan ($282.6 million) onshore bond.
The firm's bonds tumbled at market open on Thursday, extending this week's losses. Several of Vanke's yuan bonds slumped more than 20%, with some down around 40.
China's CSI300 real estate index fell to a one-year low and was down 1.5%. The broader CSI300 index though ticked up 0.4%.
SURGING RATE CUT WAGERS
While the U.S. data flow has resumed since the record 43-day government shutdown ended mid-November, most of the economic reports issued so far have been significantly dated and have offered very little insight into the health of the economy.
That has turned investors' attention squarely on comments from Fed officials to gauge the U.S. monetary policy path, with comments this week from San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President Mary Daly and Fed Governor Christopher Waller boosting expectations of a rate cut.
Traders are now pricing in an 85% chance of a rate cut next month compared with just 30% a week earlier, CME FedWatch showed.
George Boubouras, managing director of K2 Asset Management, said there is enough on the labour market weakness to offset the current inflation pulse, with a December rate cut on balance looking reasonable.
"While core inflation is above target, the U.S. 10-year breakeven inflation rate around 2.25% suggests that markets are broadly comfortable inflation expectations remain reasonable."
The euro rose to the highest in more than a week at $1.16115. The dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against six rivals, was at 99.431, after dropping 0.28% on the previous day.
Data on Wednesday showed the number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits fell to a seven-month low last week, suggesting layoffs remained low.
Sterling rose to $1.3247, a one-month high after UK finance minister Rachel Reeves' budget helped alleviate some concern about Britain's long-term finances.
YEN WATCH
The Japanese yen strengthened a bit to 156.07 per dollar as investors kept an eye on possible intervention from Tokyo after weeks of verbal jawboning from authorities to stem the currency's relentless slide.
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi ruled out on Wednesday the possibility that Japan could face a British-style "Truss moment", or loss of market confidence stemming from her expansionary fiscal policy.
The Japanese currency has weakened by nearly 10 yen since the start of October as Takaichi took over the helm amid worries the administration's spending plans will need heavy borrowing, and on doubts over the timing of the next rate hike from the Bank of Japan.
Sources told Reuters that the BOJ is preparing markets for a possible rate hike as soon as next month as it may take a more consistent rate hike path to alter the trajectory of the currency.
Bitcoin rose 1.75% to $91,787.55 on Thursday, on track to snap a four-week losing streak with a nearly 3% gain. Gold eased 0.4% to $4,146.53 per ounce, after rising 0.8% in the previous session.
