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CORRECTED - Asia shares becalmed due to holidays, dire Japan data

The Asian stock market quietly consolidated recent gains as the holidays led to thin trading and disappointing economic data from Japan cooled down that booming sector.

China, South Korea, Taiwan, and the United States are among the centers that were off, leaving?currencies and commodities, as well as bonds, all in a state of calm.

The most important data for this week will not be released until Friday, when the U.S. releases its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the fourth quarter and surveys of global manufacturing are released. Median predictions are for an annualised growth rate of 3.0%. This is down from the 4.4% in the previous quarter, but still solid.

Japan reported on Monday that its economy grew by a meager 0.2% annually in the quarter ending December, well below the 1.6% forecast. Government spending was a drag on the activity.

The figures are disappointing and highlight the difficult task that Prime Minister Takaichi faces. They should encourage her to push for fiscal stimulus.

Investors may have been thinking of this when they pushed Japan's Nikkei index up by 0.2% after a 5% increase last week. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan rose 0.1%.

The South Korean tech-heavy stock market grew 8.2% in the past week. Meanwhile,?Taiwan's market climbed nearly 6%.

Nick Ferres is chief investment officer of Vantage Point. He said, "Our concern in Asia is if mega-cap tech companies announce a pause on capital expenditure that could lead to a sharp correctio in memory stocks which have surged sharply this year in markets such as Korea."

After their outstanding performance and re-rating, we have become more cautious about memory stocks in Korea.

CAPEX - MORE CAPEX = Fewer Buybacks

In Europe, EUROSTOXX Futures were flat while DAX Futures gained 0.2%.

S&P futures increased by 0.2% while Nasdaq's futures gained 0.1%. Walmart will be the main attraction in this week's earnings season, as it offers a 'colourful view of consumer spending after a disappointing retail sales performance for December.

Stocks of the retailer have risen 20% in value this year. Its market capitalization is now over $1 trillion, making it the largest company in the consumer staples industry. This sector will grow 15% by 2026.

The rotation of defensive stocks out of the tech sector has been a boon for the defensive stocks. This is due to concerns over the high cost of AI capex, and the disruption caused by AI competition in sectors like software.

Hyperscaler capital expenditure plans are now $660 billion, an increase of $120 billion from the beginning of the earnings season.

Goldman Sachs analysts noted that while capex increased, S&P buybacks dropped by 7% compared to a year earlier.

In a note, they said that this was the third quarter in a row of stagnation. We expect that the scarcity of free money and the buybacks, will increase the premium paid by companies that are focused on returning cash flows to shareholders.

The Federal Reserve is reducing interest rates and there are no shortages of money flowing into the bond market as investors exited the stock markets.

The yields on 2-year Treasuries dropped to 3.408%, the lowest since mid-2022. Futures indicate that 68% of the time the Fed will reduce rates in June, and 62 basis point of easing is priced into the futures for the entire year.

The fall in yields last week?pulled down the dollar index by 0.8% to 96.890. Most of the losses were against a recovering Japanese yen.

The dollar was slightly?firmer, at 152.94yen after slipping 2.9% the previous week. Meanwhile, the euro was unchanged at $1.1870.

Last week, the dollar lost 1% against the Swiss Franc while the euro fell below 0.9100 Swiss Francs for first time since 2015.

Markets are on high alert for possible Swiss National Bank intervention given that inflation is at 0.1%, which is near the bottom of the target range of 0% to 2 %.

Gold prices on the commodity market fell 0.5%, to $5,014 per ounce, after swinging wildly over recent weeks, as investors were forced out of leveraged position.

Investors digested a news report that OPEC was leaning toward a resumption of oil production increases in April.

Brent was unchanged at $67.74 per barrel while U.S. crude barely moved at $62.87. (Reporting and editing by SonaliPaul)

(source: Reuters)