pwshub.com

Morning Bid: Markets bunker down as Iran-Israel tensions spark

By Jamie McGeever

(Reuters) - A look at the day ahead in Asian markets.

The final quarter of the year is under way, and the sense of caution that characterized its open on Tuesday could not be further removed from the ebullience and optimism that marked the end of the third quarter 24 hours earlier.

Investors fled risky assets like stocks for the safety of U.S. Treasuries, gold and the dollar as Iran fired a salvo of ballistic missiles at Israel on Tuesday in retaliation for Israel's campaign against Tehran's Hezbollah allies in Lebanon.

The S&P 500 and global stocks had their worst day in a month, the 10-year U.S. bond yield registered its steepest fall in a month, and oil rose 3%, after being up 5% at one stage.

On top of the escalation of tensions between Israel and Iran, the sense of gloom hanging over markets on Tuesday was heightened by the steep decline in a closely-watched tracking model estimate of U.S. GDP growth.

The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model estimate for third quarter U.S. GDP growth on Tuesday was cut to 2.5% from 3.1% last week. The fall of six-tenths of one percent was the biggest decline since the Q3 tracking estimates was launched in late July.

This will set the tone on Wednesday for markets across Asia. Chinese markets are closed for Golden Week, and the major economic releases will be inflation and manufacturing purchasing managers index data from South Korea, and consumer confidence from Japan.

Although oil spiked sharply on Tuesday, the deeply negative year-on-year price of oil is a major reason why inflation around the world is cooling, and much faster than many economists and policymakers had expected.

In many cases, like the euro zone, inflation is already at or even below the 2% target that many central banks aim for. Figures on Wednesday from Seoul are expected to show that annual consumer inflation in South Korea eased to 1.9% in September from 2.0% in August.

That would be the lowest, and also the first time below that 2% threshold, since March 2021.

Japan's markets should be a little calmer on Wednesday, even though Nikkei futures point to a fall of more than 1% at the open, as the dust begins to settle on the major political upheaval of recent days.

Investors are getting used to what they might expect from new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, once considered a monetary policy hawk who now appears to have softened his stance.

He said on Tuesday that he hoped the Bank of Japan would maintain loose monetary policy "as a trend", and that his administration will carry over the economic policy of former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and "ensure Japan fully emerges from deflation."

Here are key developments that could provide more direction to Asian markets on Wednesday:

- South Korea inflation (September)

- South Korea manufacturing PMI (September)

- Japan consumer confidence (September)

(Reporting by Jamie McGeever)

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
1 month ago - Markets hit the pause button after a selloff in equities since the start of the week but sentiment remained fragile, as worries re-emerged over the prospects for the U.S. economy and investors focused squarely on this week's job reports. ...
3 weeks ago - Investors broadly took the U.S. presidential debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris in stride where details were scarce but jabs aplenty. The spotlight though belonged to Taylor Swift, who right after the debate endorsed Harris. ...
1 month ago - It's been a blessedly quiet start to the week in Asia with Japan taking a much-needed holiday for Mountain Day, after the Nikkei tumbled down a mountain of its own last week and sent global markets reeling. Most other Asian stock markets...
1 month ago - Off-radar for much of the past week's market turbulence, U.S. inflation updates this week will reveal just how much latitude the Federal Reserve has to meet pumped-up expectations around its first interest rate cut next month. With the...
1 month ago - Asia has seen an extension of the Powell rally so far on Monday with yields and the dollar down, and most stocks edging higher. Powell put the cat among the doves with his sudden emphasis on the health of the labour market over and above...
Other stories
42 minutes ago - As the market prices in a soft landing amid strong economic data and a big rate cut, investors should still wary of taking on risk, David Kelly says.
42 minutes ago - Costco's sales growth was weak in the fourth quarter, but this segment was strong.
1 hour ago - (Bloomberg) -- The “no landing” scenario – a situation where the US economy keeps growing, inflation reignites and the Federal Reserve has little room to cut interest rates – had largely disappeared as a bond-market talking point in...
1 hour ago - The high-flying Nasdaq-tracking ETF isn't always the best choice for most investors.
2 hours ago - One labor market indicator that’s been drawing more attention lately is the hiring rate.