Asian equities tumbled on Thursday, tracking a sell-off on Wall Street, while the dollar regained its strength as surging inflation, interest rate hikes and recession fears returned to the fore.
The positive start of the week, helped by forecast-beating earnings and a major UK government policy U-turn, gave way to the downbeat mood that has characterized markets all year as traders contemplated an extended period of uncertainty.
News that UK inflation bounced back above 10 percent in September highlighted the struggle central banks have in bringing prices down, despite lifting borrowing costs in recent months. That came after a similarly glum reading out of New Zealand earlier in the week and helped push up government bond yields around the world, indicating higher interest rates, reports BSS.
The unease on trading floors, and concerns that prices are showing no sign of easing, also sent investors back into the safety of the dollar, adding more inflationary pressure outside the United States and dragging on stock markets.
“As is often the case, rising US yields and the strong US dollar are the sledgehammers pounding global equities lower,” said SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes.
After Wall Street’s drop, markets across Asia were deep in the red, with selling also fuelled by concerns about the Chinese economy as Covid cases spike in the country and leaders stick to their zero-Covid lockdown strategies.
A decision to delay the release of third-quarter growth data this week added to the unease among investors. Hong Kong led losses, shedding almost three percent, while Tokyo, Sydney, Seoul, Wellington and Taipei were all off at least one percent.
Shanghai, Singapore and Manila were also in the red.
The losses wiped out most of the gains enjoyed at the start of the week, even as positive earnings reports came in from Netflix and top Wall Street banks, with Ellen Hazen of F.L.Putnam Investment Management warning worse could be yet to come.
“As we look at third-quarter results, we think there are going to be more misses than the market is currently expecting,” she told Bloomberg Radio.
“If you look at GDP for this year, it keeps getting revised downward and it’s really hard for companies to keep growing their earnings in the face of that.”
Forex traders remain on alert as the dollar comes within a whisker of 150 yen, with Japanese authorities saying they are keeping a close watch on the market and are ready to step in to support the beleaguered currency.
– Pound troubles –
The pound was also back under pressure, having bounced Monday after Britain’s new finance minister Jeremy Hunt reversed virtually all of Prime Minister Liz Truss’s debt-fuelled, tax-cutting mini-budget that hammered financial markets.
Sterling was back around $1.12 — down from more than $1.14 Tuesday — as the government was plunged into a fresh crisis following the resignation of Home Secretary Suella Braverman. That came days after the sacking of Hunt’s predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng and has left Truss’s premiership on a knife edge.
Oil prices were mixed after rallying Wednesday in reaction to a drop in US petroleum stockpiles, and despite President Joe Biden’s decision to release 15 million barrels from US strategic reserves. The crude was the last batch to be released from the 180 barrels pledged by Biden earlier this year aimed at bringing costs down.
But Innes added: “Markets will mostly ignore further releases from the Strategic Petroleum Reserves — prices are elevated because of the medium- and longer-term gap between supply and demand resulting from years of oil industry swoon and the resulting low capital expenditure.