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Asian stocks fall as nervous markets await the Fed

Asian stocks fell on Tuesday and the dollar remained steady as investors braced themselves for a?cut in U.S. rates this week. The yen remained calm after an earthquake that rocked Japan’s northeast region, though the impact was minimal.

Investor sentiment remains cautious as the markets await a number of central bank meetings. This includes a decision that is expected to be made by the Reserve Bank of Australia.

All three banks, the RBA, SNB, and Bank of Canada, are expected to keep rates unchanged this week. The Federal Reserve, on the other hand, is expected to reduce borrowing costs Wednesday.

Bond investors are preparing for a short-term easing cycle in the U.S., following the Fed's rate cut of December. Wall Street banks expect fewer Fed rate cuts in 2026 due to lingering concerns about inflation and the expectation of a more resilient U.S. economic.

Stocks are now trading in a sideways fashion. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan fell 0.28% after a weak session overnight on Wall Street. Japan's Nikkei fell by 0.08%, while South Korea’s Kospi dropped by 0.58%.

Prashant Nnewnaha, senior Asia-Pacific rate strategist at TD Securities said: "The low-hanging fruits from risk management reductions are likely over. Chair (Jerome Powell)'s presser will likely convey a more conservative approach moving forward?regarding further policy recalibration."

The dot plot will likely show one reduction in 2026. If the dot plot showed two cuts next year, this would be "dovish."

Some strategists believe that the Fed's Policy Committee could be divided, even though a rate reduction is expected.

The meeting is also being held in the context of a heightened interest from the market on who will replace Powell as Fed Chair when his current term ends next May. Kevin Hassett, White House Economic Advisor and leading contender for the Fed chair role, said in an exclusive interview that the Fed must continue to reduce interest rates.

According to LSEG, traders are pricing 77 basis point of easing at the end of next.

David Mericle is the chief U.S. economics at Goldman Sachs. He expects that the Fed will raise the bar on further rate cuts. Powell will also be cautious.

"But the FOMC can't box itself in, especially at a time where we have two outdated employment reports, as a January reduction could be appropriate."

Asian chip stocks shook after U.S. president Donald Trump announced that the United States would allow Nvidia H200 processors - its second best artificial intelligence chips - to be?exported to China, and collect a 25 percent fee on such sales. China's CSI Semiconductor Industry Index fell about 1% during early trading.

The dollar remained mostly stable in Tuesday's currency market. The dollar was mostly steady on Tuesday. The dollar index (which measures the U.S. money against six other currencies) was 99.09. The index has fallen by nearly 9% in the past year and is on track to have its biggest annual decline since 2017.

The Australian dollar was stable at $0.6625 before the RBA's policy announcement later that day. It is expected that the central bank will maintain its current rate, but markets are worried about any hawkish comments in the commentary.

After a sharp decline immediately following the earthquake, the yen traded at 155.87 to the dollar during early Asian hours. The Japanese authorities lifted the tsunami warnings Tuesday, hours after a powerful 7.5-magnitude quake shook northeastern Japan, injuring 30 people at least and forcing 90,000 residents from their homes.

Gold was 0.13% more expensive at $4194.11 an ounce, ahead of the Fed's meeting. Oil prices stabilized after a 2% drop in the previous session, as traders kept an eye on the peace talks that are expected to end Russia's conflict in Ukraine.

Brent crude futures remained flat at $62.48 per barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude was trading at $58.84 a barrel, down by 0.07%. (Reporting and editing by Shri Navaratnam in Singapore)

(source: Reuters)