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Stocks unsteady after bond and bitcoin sales

Stocks unsteady after bond and bitcoin sales
Stocks unsteady after bond and bitcoin sales

The stock market made modest gains on Tuesday and traders were cautious after a decline in cryptocurrency and a global selloff of bonds triggered by an upcoming interest rate increase in Japan.

S&P futures were stable in early trading, following overnight falls on Wall Street. Japanese government bonds, however, remained under pressure before a 10-year bond auction, following a week-long fall on concerns about the nation’s fiscal outlook.

In morning trading, the yields on 10-year JGBs increased by 1.5 basis points. They now stand at 1.88%, a record high for 17 years. Bitcoin, which was a talisman of sentiment, suffered a 5.2% decline on Monday. At $87,000, it is down 30 percent from its October peak.

The mood in cryptocurrencies is somewhere between fearful, and resigned, said Jehan Cho, founder of Kenetic Capital. This blockchain venture capital company, with its latest drop, caught investors off guard.

Even the most optimistic may decide to hibernate over the winter.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan grew 0.6%, while Tokyo's Nikkei climbed 0.5% after Monday's sharp decline.

JAPAN TO RISE, FED TO CUT

On Monday, Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo ueda outlined the steps to tightening monetary policy. This heightened expectations that Japan would hike interest rates in this month.

The yield on ten-year Japanese government bonds shot up six basis points. Traders sold global bonds, and the yields of ten-year Treasury notes rose 7.7 basis points to 4.08%.

The yen has gained strength and held steady on the foreign exchange market over the last 24 hours. It was trading at 155.75 to the dollar on Tuesday.

The dollar was pushed back by the move. The euro traded at $1.16 as markets awaited the eurozone inflation figures due later that session.

Some investors are beginning to anticipate a more lasting turn down for the greenback, as the U.S. is preparing to reduce interest rates faster and further than other countries.

The Federal Reserve is expected to cut rates in December, according to data released on Monday. Manufacturing contracted for the ninth consecutive month in November. However, consumers surpassed analyst expectations by spending $23.6 billion during their online shopping spree.

The dollar could fall by the end of the year, according to Tim Baker, a strategist at Deutsche Bank.

The dollar has had a bad decade. December was the worst. It has fallen 80% of time and by more than 1% on average.

Gold held on to its recent gains, just above $4200 per ounce. The oil prices also rose following drone attacks against Russian supplies. Brent crude futures was eight cents higher on Tuesday at $63.26 per barrel. (Reporting and Editing by Shri Navaratnam).

(source: Reuters)