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Stocks surge on hopes of Fed easing, but yen is locked in the intervention zone

Stocks surge on hopes of Fed easing, but yen is locked in the intervention zone
Stocks surge on hopes of Fed easing, but yen is locked in the intervention zone

The dollar fell on Thursday as traders began to weigh the possibility of a rate increase before the end of the year. Asian stocks also rose. The holiday-shortened week has resulted in limited movements across the markets. Stocks have maintained a generally positive tone, while currencies are more calm as investors shed AI bubble fears that had shaken equities early in November.

The U.S. market is closed on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday. It will reopen for a brief session on Friday.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan rose 0.4%, following Wall Street gains and on track to end a three-week loss streak. Japan's Nikkei, and South Korea's Kospi both surged by over 1%.

Charu Chanana is the chief investment strategist for Saxo. He said that stocks have responded positively to renewed Fed rate-cut expectations, which helped to cool recent AI bubble concerns.

The Fed's anticipated cut and strong seasonality make December a difficult to bearish month, and Santa rally is still on the table.

China's property sector has been in the spotlight again after China Vanke, a property developer, sought approval from bondholders to delay repayment of an onshore bond worth 2 billion yuan (282.6 million dollars).

At the opening of the market on Thursday, bonds issued by Vanke continued to fall. This is a continuation of this week's losses. Vanke's bonds in yuan have fallen by more than 20%. Some are down as much as 40%.

China's CSI300 property index dropped to a new low of 1.5%. The broader CSI300 Index however ticked up by 0.4%.

WAGE WAGERS FOR SURGING RATE CUTTING

The U.S. data has returned since the 43-day record government shutdown ended in mid-November. However, the majority of economic reports released so far are significantly outdated and offer very little insight on the state of the economy.

Investors are now focusing on the comments of Fed officials in order to determine U.S. monetary policies. Comments this week by San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank president Mary Daly, and Fed Governor Christopher Waller have boosted expectations for a rate reduction.

CME FedWatch shows that traders now price in 85% of a rate reduction next month, compared to just 30% one week ago.

George Boubouras of K2 Asset Management said that the weakening labour market is sufficient to offset inflation. A rate cut in December looks reasonable.

While core inflation is higher than target, the U.S. breakeven 10-year inflation rate of around 2.25 percent suggests that markets remain comfortable with inflation expectations.

The euro reached its highest level in over a week, at $1.16115. The dollar index (which measures the U.S. currencies against six rivals) was 99.431, down 0.28% from the previous day.

According to data released on Wednesday, the number of Americans who applied for unemployment benefits last week fell to its lowest level in seven months. This suggests that layoffs are still low.

The sterling rose to $1.3247 in a month's time, after the UK Finance Minister Rachel Reeves budget eased some concerns about Britain's finances on a long-term basis.

Watches YEN

The Japanese yen gained a little to 156.07 dollars as investors waited for Tokyo to intervene after weeks of verbal scolding by authorities to stop the currency's steady decline.

Sanae Takaichi, Prime Minister of Japan, ruled out Wednesday that Japan might face a "Truss Moment" or loss in market confidence resulting from her fiscal expansion.

Since the beginning of October, the Japanese currency has fallen by almost 10 yen. This is because Takaichi assumed the presidency amid concerns that the government's spending plan will require heavy borrowing and doubts about the timing of the Bank of Japan's next rate increase.

Sources have told us that the BOJ has been preparing the markets for an upcoming rate hike. It may even be as early as next month. The BOJ could also adopt a more consistent path of rate hikes to change the trajectory of its currency.

Bitcoin gained 1.75% on Thursday to $91,787.55, on course to end a four-week loss streak with a gain of nearly 3%. Gold fell 0.4% to $4146.53 an ounce after rising by 0.8% the previous session. (Reporting and editing by Shri Navaratnam in Singapore, Ankur Banerjee)

(source: Reuters)