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Asian shares continue to fall, bond market turmoil stokes new anxiety

Asian shares continue to fall, bond market turmoil stokes new anxiety
Asian shares continue to fall, bond market turmoil stokes new anxiety

Asian stocks continued to fall for a third day on Wednesday, dragged down by increased tensions surrounding U.S. threats of acquiring Greenland in advance of President Donald Trump’s Davos address. However, a global bond sell-off appeared to have slowed for the moment.

The fear of the "Sell America" trade - which emerged in the wake of last year's "Liberation Day tariff announcements" in April – gripped the markets overnight as Wall Street fell over 2% and the U.S. Dollar suffered its largest fall in more than a month.

Investors fled to gold and silver which had both reached record highs.

Mantas vanagas, senior economist at Westpac, said that the'sell America trade' was driving the major market movements overnight. Investors were looking to reduce their exposure to the U.S. as they viewed it as an unreliable and self-defeating partner.

Trump has however redoubled his rhetoric on Greenland. He said that there is "no turning back" from his goal of controlling the island and refused to rule out taking control by force. Trump's threat to impose tariffs on Europe also reignited fears of a trade war.

On Thursday, the European Union will convene a summit to discuss this issue. The long-standing U.S./EU alliance is clearly in danger.

The World Economic Forum is in Davos, where Trump will deliver a speech Wednesday.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific index outside Japan dropped 0.3% in early trading. Japan's Nikkei fell 1.2% for the fifth consecutive day.

Nasdaq and S&P futures both rose 0.2% overnight after Wall Street experienced its biggest drop in three months. The S&P500 fell by 2.06%, while the Nasdaq Composite dropped by 2.4%.

The Euro STOXX50 futures and the DAX futures both fell by 0.4%.

JAPAN'S BOND RULE PAUSES FOR NOW

The global bond markets were still recovering from a brutal selling off, caught in a perfect hurricane of concerns over U.S. exposure and an increase in Japanese government bonds yields.

Bond yields in Japan soared to new records due to fears of increased government spending by Prime Minister Sanae Takayichi.

Investors tried to catch their breathe in the early trading. The 40-year Japanese Government Bond yields fell 6 basis points to 4.145% on Wednesday, after surging 26 basis points a day earlier and reaching a record high 4.215%. Other tenors remain thinly liquid.

Treasury yields in the United States were also stable on Wednesday. The benchmark 10-year rate fell 1 bp, to 4.285%. It had jumped overnight by 7 bp to reach a five-month peak of 4.313% on the back of "Sell America".

Danish pension fund AkademikerPension announced on Tuesday that it will sell its holdings of U.S. Treasuries worth about $100 million by the end this month. It blamed weak U.S. Government finances.

The U.S. Dollar remained at 98.56 per dollar against major peers after dropping 0.5% over night - the largest daily drop since early December.

The yen was stable at 158.19 dollars, but it lost out in a few crosses. The Swiss franc hit a record-high of 200.19 yen.

Bank of Japan will meet on Friday. Though a rate increase is not expected, policymakers may tighten up the monetary system as early as April.

The oil prices dropped as geopolitical tensions, and the expected increase in U.S. crude stocks outweighed a temporary stoppage of production at two large Kazakh fields.

West Texas Intermediate crude prices fell by 1.31% in March to $59.57 per barrel.

Silver prices also rose, but only by 0.4%, to $95.01, falling short of the record of $95.87 set on Tuesday.

(source: Reuters)