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Bonds slide, stocks slip as US election looms

Asian stocks turned lower and the dollar waited multimonth peaks on Tuesday as a sharp selloff in bonds and a jump in gold recommended investors are hunching down ahead of the U.S. election.

Standard 10-year Treasury yields increased 11 basis points over night and a further 1 bp in early Asia trade to 4.19%. Gold hit a record high just above $2,740 an ounce on Monday and traded at $2,725 early on Tuesday.

Japan's Nikkei slid 1.1% in morning trade to strike its least expensive because early October. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.8%.

Wall Street determines edged down overnight and futures inched lower in Asia. A sharp rebound in oil costs - which can flow through to inflation - most likely helped unsettle bond markets, said ANZ strategist Jack Chambers, in addition to the U.S. election, now only 2 weeks away, coming in to see.

A secondary factor to consider might be a bit more concentrate on the U.S. election and fiscal dynamics, he said. No matter who wins, you can't actually see a path to fiscal debt consolidation.

Brent crude futures had climbed up 1.7% on Monday, with no letup in Middle East battling following the death of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar. Prices steadied at $73.89 a barrel in Asia.

In Australia, the benchmark S&P/ ASX 200 was down more than 1.3% mid-morning. Shares in independent grocer Metcash slid 6% after a Goldman Sachs note cut the stock price target and stated the company runs the risk of losing market share.

China's markets were pinned well listed below recent highs while traders await more information and specifically more federal government seriousness and spending to support the ailing economy.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng was flat, as was the Shanghai Composite.

Forex markets primarily tracked the relocation in Treasuries, which sent the dollar greater. The euro traded at $1.0819, within a whisker of its lowest given that early August.

The yen sat by a 2-1/2 month low at 150.67 per dollar, while the Australian and New Zealand dollars were likewise pinned near multi-month lows at $0.6655 and $ 0.6021 respectively.

Experts state the dollar's recent rally reflects markets pricing a Donald Trump triumph in the U.S. governmental race and a stronger currency as his trade, tax and immigration policies will likely cause higher inflation and greater yields.

With a triumph for President Trump now priced into currency markets, AUD/USD has modest rather than big drawback risk from when the election results start to be launched, stated Commonwealth Bank of Australia strategist Joe Capurso in a note.

With Vice President Harris now the underdog, the marketplace reaction to her triumph would likely be bigger than a triumph by President Trump.

A reasonably bare data calendar puts extra focus on U.S. incomes for insight into the economy and markets' mood.

General Motors, Texas Instruments Verizon , Lockheed Martin and 3M are among those reporting on Tuesday.

(source: Reuters)