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Asian shares are choppy as dollar increases ahead of Powell's speech

The stocks in Asia mostly held to their safe ranges as traders awaited the key speech by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who will be speaking at the annual Jackson Hole Symposium this weekend. This speech could shed some light on the direction monetary policy.

The financial markets are waiting for Powell to give them clues about the possibility of a rate cut in September, following recent signs of weakness on the job market.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan has lost early gains, and is now down by 0.1%. This brings its gain to 1.3% for the month.

Investors are most concerned about what central bankers say about U.S. Tariffs, their impact on the economy and inflation and which factor will have more influence on interest rates policy as central banks struggle with the risk stagflation, said Vasu Menon.

China's blue chip CSI 300 Index jumped by 1.8% on Thursday, a day that saw gains for the third straight day. Tech shares were the first to rise after DeepSeek upgraded its flagship V3 AI and Foxconn reported that Nvidia asked Foxconn not to work on the H20 AI chips. This boosted the shares of Chinese competitors.

China's technology-focused STAR 50 Index rose by almost 8%.

The Nikkei was fluctuating between gains and losses and last fell by 0.1%.

Data from Japan showed that core consumer prices fell for the second consecutive month in July, but they remained above the central banks' 2% target. This kept alive expectations of a rate increase in the near future. The yen was still on track for a 1% drop for the week, despite the data. BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda is also scheduled to speak in Jackson Hole, Wyoming this weekend.

The dollar index (which tracks the greenback versus a basket currencies of major trading partner) advanced 0.2% to 90.796 as traders analyzed speeches by Fed officials who seemed lukewarm about the idea of a rate cut next week.

S&P futures fluctuated between gains and losses, and last traded down by 0.1%. Cash gauges on Wall Street are on a losing streak of five days, which puts them on course for their biggest weekly decline in this month.

After a weaker-than-expected payrolls report earlier this month and consumer price data showing limited upward pressure due to tariffs, traders had increased their bets on a September reduction.

The market's pricing has retreated slightly since the minutes of the Fed meeting in July were released. According to CME Group’s FedWatch, traders now price in a 73.3% chance of a September cut, down from an 82.4% probability on Thursday.

Kong says that the most likely scenario for Powell is to not provide "any definitive hints" about what the Fed's next move will be ahead of crucial non-farm payrolls data and CPI figures.

"Given the current state of the market, the risk is that the U.S. Dollar will strengthen, especially if the challenge the current pricing on the market for a 25 basis-point reduction."

The PMI data of S&P Global shows the fastest growth in manufacturing orders for 18 months.

The labour market has also revealed pockets of weakness. Last week, the number Americans who applied for unemployment benefits increased by the most since about three months and the number receiving unemployment relief rose to its highest level in almost four years.

The euro fell, falling 0.2% to $1.1585 - a low for two weeks - as the EU and U.S. revealed details of the framework trade agreement they struck in July.

Brent crude prices have stabilised. They last traded up 0.1% to $67.73 a barrel after strong gains on Friday as Russia and Ukraine both blamed eachother for the stalled peace processes and U.S. Data showed signs of a strong demand in America, the largest oil consumer nation.

Gold spot fell 0.3% to $3,329.40 an ounce.

(source: Reuters)