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Asian stocks recover as China's tech sector roars back

Asian stocks recover as China's tech sector roars back

The stock market in Asia recovered on Wednesday after Wall Street's losses. A renewed interest in artificial intelligence and semiconductors fueled China's tech rally.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan reversed an earlier decline by as much as 0.5% in the morning session, to be up by 0.1% at mid-afternoon.

Chinese stocks were the leaders, with the STAR 50 Index up 3.6% and a measure of Hong Kong listed companies rising 1.5%. Alibaba's Hong Kong listed shares increased by up to 7.8% following the announcement on Wednesday of its largest AI model ever, the Qwen3 Max.

UBS analysts stated in a research report that "the upward trend for A shares has accelerated since August, with major indexes breaking through October 2024's highs." This has led to a positive money-making impact that is slowly attracting investors from the sidelines.

After two days of declining, the dollar index was up 0.2% to 97.438. The dollar rose 0.3% against the yen to 148.05.

U.S. Stock Futures rose 0.2% last, following a decline on Wall Street Tuesday. After remarks made by Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, the S&P 500 fell 0.6%. This was its largest one-day drop in three weeks.

In a recent note, DBS analysts noted that "U.S. equity and bond yields fell because Fed Chair Jerome Powell explicitly described equities in his speech as being 'fairly valued' and acknowledged there was no policy with a 'risk-free' path." "He didn't commit to aggressive rates cuts due to the difficult situation of balancing upside risks to inflation and downside risks to employment," DBS analysts wrote in a note.

Asian stocks remain near their four-year highs and are on track to have the best month in a long time this month, thanks to a weaker dollar, an increase in regional technology shares, and the Federal Reserve's policy of easing.

Australian shares were the main drag on Asian benchmarks on Wednesday. They fell by 0.9% and extended losses following a higher-than-expected increase in consumer prices for August.

Capital Economics analysts stated in a recent research note that, "Although it won't give much attention to the rise in headline inflation rates, the strength of core inflation rates will make the RBA pause and think."

The Nikkei index of Japan was up 0.3% last time, reversing previous declines.

The CME Group’s FedWatch tool shows that traders have increased their bets for further rate cuts in the United States. Fed funds futures now indicate a 91.9% probability of a rate reduction at the central banks October meeting. This is up from an 89.8% chance on Tuesday.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 4,1042% from its U.S. closing of 4.118% Tuesday. The yield on the two-year bond, which increases with traders' expectation of higher Fed fund rates, dropped to 3.5673% from a U.S. closing of 3.57%.

The U.S. economy data released Tuesday has stoked concerns about growth. S&P Global's purchasing managers' index data shows that business activity in the U.S. slowed down for a second consecutive month in September.

Citi analysts stated in a note that "the S&P PMIs are softer than the preliminary September release but remain in expansion, and both are within the range of recent months." They said that the headline figures were misleading, and the actual numbers showed more weakness.

Analysts said that the composite output price index had fallen to its lowest level since April. Anecdotes indicate that companies are finding it difficult to pass on higher costs to customers due to weaker demand and increased competition.

Brent crude oil prices were last up 0.1%, at $67.71 a barrel. This was after an agreement to resume exports out of Iraq's Kurdistan fell through, which calmed some investor fears that the restart could exacerbate concerns about global oversupply.

After hitting a record-high on Tuesday, spot gold was up by 0.3% to $3,773.36 an ounce.

(source: Reuters)