Asia: Markets rise on optimism ahead of US inflation data

    • In early trade on Thursday, Hong Kong again led the gains by rising more than one per cent while Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Wellington, Taipei, Manila and Jakarta also rallied.
    • In early trade on Thursday, Hong Kong again led the gains by rising more than one per cent while Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Wellington, Taipei, Manila and Jakarta also rallied. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Thu, Jan 12, 2023 · 11:06 AM

    ASIAN markets rose on Thursday as traders grew confident ahead of data later in the day that is expected to show another softening of US inflation, giving the Federal Reserve room to slow its pace of interest rate hikes.

    Wall Street’s three main indexes provided a strong lead, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq soaring more than one per cent each thanks to a rush back into beaten-down tech firms.

    With optimism over China’s reopening already fuelling a rally across Asia, signs that the Fed’s long-running monetary tightening campaign is finally paying off has provided investors with more reason to be happy.

    The consumer price index reading on Thursday is the key event for investors this week, though analysts warned that an above-forecast reading would deal a hefty blow to confidence on trading floors.

    “An in-line or softer-than-expected CPI will likely result in a rally, whereas a hotter number could easily tip over the applecart,” said Arthur Hogan at B. Riley Wealth.

    “Good news for the economy can become good news for markets.”

    BT in your inbox

    Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.

    In early trade, Hong Kong again led the gains by rising more than one per cent while Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Wellington, Taipei, Manila and Jakarta also rallied. Tokyo was flat.

    Gains were also helped by comments from Fed official Susan Collins backing a quarter-point rate hike at the bank’s next policy decision on Feb 1.

    Collins, who is head of the Boston Fed, told The New York Times that slowing the pace of increases would give policymakers a chance to see how their efforts to rein in decades-high inflation were working.

    Investors are also keeping tabs on developments in China as it emerges from years of strict zero-Covid containment measures.

    While the long-term outlook remains positive, soaring infections across the country are leading to worries about the effect on economic activity.

    However, SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes said: “Recent surveys suggest that the first wave has already peaked in China. And though spot economics remain poor, the market has discounted the near-term headwinds as hope springs eternal once the winter Covid waves pass.”

    Building expectations for Chinese demand and a healthy 2023 continue to put upward pressure on oil prices, which jumped around three per cent Wednesday, with traders ignoring data showing a massive pick-up in US inventories.

    “Energy traders should get used to seeing oil prices head higher,” said Oanda’s Edward Moya. “Oil demand is coming back and expectations are high that China’s demand is about to skyrocket.”

    Several crude experts have tipped the commodity to top US$100 a barrel this year, with top hedge fund manager Pierre Andurand warning last week that it could pass US$140. AFP

    Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services