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Asia stocks cautious on the countdown to Fed

Asia stocks cautious on the countdown to Fed
Asia stocks cautious on the countdown to Fed

Investors bet on a Federal Reserve rate cut this week. However, the meeting may be the most contentious one in recent history with some policymakers openly opposing an easing.

The markets indicate that there is an 85% probability of a reduction by a quarter point in the funds rate range between 3.75% and 4.0%. A steady decision, therefore, would be a shock. Only 19 of the 108 analysts polled predicted no change and the remainder a reduction.

Michael Feroli of JPMorgan's U.S. Economics wrote in a memo that "we expect at least two dissents" in favor of no action, and that a small majority of the FOMC members will indicate that a cut in December was appropriate.

Since 2019, the Federal Open Market Committee only had three or more dissensions in a single meeting. This has happened nine times since 1990.

Feroli believes the Fed will also cut rates in January to protect against a prolonged weakening of the labour market before taking a long policy pause. The markets currently only see a 24% probability of a move in January, and further easing will not be fully priced until the end of July.

All three central banks, in Canada and Switzerland, are meeting this week. They all appear to be holding their ground. The Swiss National Bank would like to ease further to counter the strength of their franc but is already at zero percent and does not want to go below that.

Markets have given up on the idea of another Reserve Bank of Australia easing and are even pricing in a rate increase for late 2026.

The recent support of stocks has been due to the hopes for further Fed stimulus, but Wednesday's risk for a hawkish outlook made trading cautious. S&P 500 and Nasdaq Futures both remained unchanged in early trading.

Costco's earnings this week will give a better idea of consumer demand.

BONDS UNDER SUBSTANCE

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei dipped 0.3%, after making a modest 0.5% gain last week. South Korean stocks fell 0.3% after a 4.4% jump last week, following confirmation of a reduced U.S. duty on exports.

In quiet trading, MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific index outside Japan fell a mere 0.1%.

The Chinese blue-chips should be taking their cues from the November trade data, which will provide fresh evidence about how its exports fare in the face tariffs.

Bond markets have seen a pressure on longer-dated Treasuries due to the possibility of hawkish Fed guidance, even if the Fed does decide on a rate cut this week.

The attacks of President Donald Trump on the independence of the Fed could also lead to rates being too low, which would fuel inflation in time.

Ten-year yields were released on Monday The rate was a little higher, at 4,146%. It had risen 9 basis points in the previous week.

It was unchanged at 155.37yen after reaching a three-week high at 154.34 yen on Friday.

The euro was stable at $1.1638. It is just below its recent high of $1.1682.

Commodities are generally supported by bets on more U.S. stimulus policy. Copper has reached all-time-highs due to a combination of supply concerns and infrastructure investment related to AI.

After spiking to $4,259 an ounce on Friday, gold was at $4,202, and silver was only a few cents off its lifetime high.

The possibility of lower interest rates, combined with geopolitical uncertainties that could limit supply from Russia and Venezuela, also helped to support oil prices.

Brent crude oil rose 0.2%, to $63.85 per barrel. U.S. crude oil increased 0.2%, to $60.18 a barrel. (Editing by Shri Navaratnam).

(source: Reuters)