Asia: Markets waver after Wall Street retreats from record
EQUITIES wavered on Wednesday following a down day on Wall Street, where worries about high valuations were compounded by mixed messaging from the Federal Reserve on its plans for interest rates.
Investors have enjoyed a months-long rally that has pushed some markets to record highs but the run-up took a pause on Tuesday amid talk that the gains may have gone too far.
All three main indexes in New York were dragged down from peaks by tech titans including Nvidia and Amazon, which have been at the forefront of the global surge owing to huge bets on artificial intelligence.
Another key driver of the gains has been expectations that the Fed will cut borrowing costs several times this year, with last week’s reduction followed by forecasts that two more were in the pipeline.
However, comments from key officials stoked uncertainty among investors.
Boss Jerome Powell warned there was “no risk-free path”.
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“If we ease too aggressively, we could leave the inflation job unfinished and need to reverse course later to fully restore two-per cent inflation,” he said at an event in Rhode Island.
But he added: “If we maintain restrictive policy too long, the labour market could soften unnecessarily.”
The remarks came as Atlanta Fed chief Raphael Bostic and Chicago counterpart Austan Goolsbee warned of more inflation.
However, governor Michelle Bowman called on her colleagues to slash rates amid fears they were “at serious risk of already being behind the curve in addressing deteriorating labor market conditions”.
“Now that we have seen many months of deteriorating labour market conditions, it is time for the committee to act decisively and proactively to address decreasing labour market dynamism and emerging signs of fragility,” she said in prepared remarks ahead of an event in Kentucky.
Investors are now awaiting the release on Friday of the personal consumption expenditure (PCE) index, the Fed’s favoured gauge of inflation, and key jobs figures the week after.
New governor Stephen Miran, who was appointed by Donald Trump, also called for more reductions.
Pepperstone’s Chris Weston wrote: “One assumes that if we see US core PCE inflation print at 0.2 per cent month-on-month, followed by a tick higher in the layoff rate... and another weak non-farm payrolls release, Bowman may conclude the time for insurance cuts has passed and revert back to a 50-basis-point dissent.”
In Asian trade, Tokyo fell along with Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Taipei and Wellington, though there were small gains in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Manila. AFP
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