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Asian shares turn cautious

| Updated: February 27, 2018 16:10:00


Visitors looks at an electronic board showing the Japan's Nikkei average at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) in Tokyo, Japan, February 9, 2016. Reuters/Files Visitors looks at an electronic board showing the Japan's Nikkei average at the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) in Tokyo, Japan, February 9, 2016. Reuters/Files

Asian share markets were in a cautious mood on Monday as investors braced for an event-packed week headlined by US inflation data and the first House testimony by the new head of the Federal Reserve.

Sentiment was fragile with the dollar losing early gains and safe-haven bonds firming as E-Mini futures for the S&P 500 turned 0.1 per cent lower.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan nudged up 0.3 per cent, but bourses across the region were mixed.

Japan’s Nikkei led with an increase of 0.7 per cent, pulling back from early gains of 1.2 per cent, but Chinese blue chips slipped 0.5 per cent.

China’s ruling Communist Party on Sunday set the stage for President Xi Jinping to stay in office indefinitely, with a proposal to remove a constitutional clause limiting presidential service to just two terms in office.

Investors initially took heart from Friday’s rally on Wall Street which saw the VIX volatility index end at 16.49 per cent, far below the 50 per cent peak touched at the height of market turmoil in early February.

The mood has calmed partly thanks to expectations the Federal Reserve will stay gradual in its tightening, a measured outlook underlined by the central bank in a governors’ report released on Friday.

Investors also seem to be wagering that Fed Chairman Jerome Powell will stick to that script at his first appearance before the House on Tuesday, followed by testimony to the Senate on Thursday.

“Powell will be highly cognisant of the spike in risk aversion in late January and will be keen not to rock the boat too greatly,” argued Chris Weston, chief market strategist at broker IG.

“Futures markets on Friday were pricing in less implied policy tightening from the Fed in the years ahead, suggesting traders are not expecting Powell to signal a more aggressive response.”

Yields on US 10-year Treasuries had also backed off to 2.85 per cent and away from a four-year top of 2.957 per cent.

An added wrinkle is that the Fed’s favoured measure of inflation, the core personal consumption expenditure (PCE) index, is out early on Thursday.

Markets will be hyper-sensitive to any hint of a pick-up in core inflation given the surprising strength of wages in January and Powell is certain to be questioned on the risks by Senators.

In currency markets, the US dollar surrendered early gains to dip 0.1 per cent on a basket of currencies to 89.796. That followed a 0.8 per cent bounce last week.

It also retreated on the yen to reach 106.61, failing to hold an early 107.28 top.

The euro was hovering at $1.2305 and just above last week’s trough at $1.2258, with bulls cautious ahead of the outcome of the Italian general election on March 4, reports Reuters.

A German Social Democrats’ poll of its members on joining another coalition government with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives is also due that day, two big political risk events for markets.

In commodities, the lapse in the dollar helped spot gold bounce 0.5 per cent to $1,335.36 per ounce.

Oil prices were underpinned by the shutdown of the El Feel oilfield in Libya and upbeat comments from Saudi Arabia that an OPEC-led effort to cut stockpiles is working.

US crude futures added 8 cents to $63.63 a barrel, while Brent futures eased 2 cents to $67.29.

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