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Japan data and holidays dampen shares in Asia

The Asian share market quietly consolidated recent gains on Monday, as the Lunar?Year holiday led to thin trading. Meanwhile, dismal economic reports from Japan drained some of the air from that booming stock market. China, South Korea and?Taiwan are among the markets closed. This leaves?currencies, bonds, and precious metals becalmed.

Japan's economy only grew by a meager 0.2% annually in the quarter ending December, far less than the 1.6% forecast. Government spending was a drag on the activity.

The figures are disappointing and highlight the difficult task that Prime Minister Takaichi faces. They should encourage her to push for more aggressive fiscal stimuli.

Nikkei, the Japanese stock market index, rose 0.2% after gaining 5% in one week. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan rose 0.4%.

Last week, South Korea's technology-heavy stock market grew by 8.2%. Taiwan's stock market grew by almost 6%.

Nick Ferres is chief investment officer of Vantage Point. He said, "We are concerned that the mega-cap tech companies in Asia may announce a pause on capital expenditures. This could lead to a sharp correction for memory stocks, which have surged in markets such as Korea this year."

After their outstanding performance and revaluation, we are more cautious about memory stocks in Korea.

In Europe, EUROSTOXX Futures increased by 0.1%. DAX Futures and FTSE Futures also rose by 0.2%.

S&P futures increased by 0.2% while Nasdaq futures grew by 0.1%.

The most important data for this week will not be released until Friday, when global surveys of manufacturing and the U.S. Gross Domestic Product for the fourth quarter are released.

The median forecasts indicate a growth rate of 3.0% annually, down from the?4.4% in the previous quarter.

CAPEX IS KEY TO FEWER BUYBACKS The Earnings Season continues in the U.S. Walmart will be the main attraction, as it will give a good indication of consumer spending patterns after a disappointing retail sales month.

Stocks of the retailer have risen 20% in value this year. Its market capitalisation is now over $1 trillion, making it the largest company in the consumer staples industry. This sector will grow 15% by 2026.

The rotation of defensive stocks out of the tech sector has been a boon for the defensive stocks. This is due to concerns over the high cost of AI capex, and the disruption caused by AI competition in sectors like software.

Hyperscaler capital expenditure plans are now $660 billion. This is $120 billion more than they were at the beginning of earnings season. Goldman Sachs analysts noted that while capex is on the rise, S&P buybacks have dropped by 7% compared to a year earlier.

In a note, they said that this was the third quarter in a row of stagnation. We expect that the scarcity of cash and the buybacks, which are increasing, will increase the premium paid by companies who return cash to their shareholders. The Federal Reserve is reducing interest rates and there's no shortage of money flowing into the bond market as investors exit stocks.

The yields on two-year Treasuries dropped to 3.408% last Friday, the lowest since mid-2022. Futures indicate that 68% of the Fed's cuts will occur in June, and 62 basis point of easing is priced into the year.

The dollar index fell 0.8% to 96.890 last week, with the majority of the losses coming from a recovering Japanese yen.

The dollar rose 0.2% on Monday to 153.05 Japanese yen, after falling 2.9% the previous week. Meanwhile, the euro remained flat at $1.186.

Last week, the dollar lost 1% against the Swiss Franc. The euro also fell below 0.9100 Swiss Francs for first time since 2015. The constant rise in the Swiss franc is causing a flurry of activity on the markets, as the Swiss National Bank could intervene. Inflation has already reached 0.1% and is close to the bottom end of the target range of?0% - 2%.

Gold fell 1.3% on the commodity market to $4,973 per ounce, after swinging wildly over recent weeks, as investors were forced out of leveraged position. Silver fell 3%, to $75.05 per ounce. Oil prices remained steady as investors digested a recent report that OPEC was leaning toward a resumption in oil production increases.

Brent remained at $67.77 per barrel while U.S. crude barely moved at $62.91 a barrel. (Reporting and editing by Sonali Mayberry and Kate Mayberry; Reporting by Wayne Cole)

(source: Reuters)