SINGAPORE – Asian stocks braked around two-month highs on Thursday, while the dollar nursed modest losses, after the U.S. Federal Reserve chose not to hike interest rates for the first time in 17 months, even if it opened the door to more hikes ahead.
The Fed left its benchmark funds rate window at 5-5.25 percent, and chair Jerome Powell said the U.S. central bank needed to gather more information about the economy to determine what to do next.
Committee members surprised markets by projecting two more 25 basis point hikes this year, sending short-term U.S. yields higher and closing out bets on any cuts in 2023.
The euro, made a one-month peak after the decision at $1.0865 and now, at $1.0826, awaits a European Central Bank meeting later in the day where markets expect an eighth straight rate hike will take borrowing costs to two-decade highs.
The S&P 500 churned sideways overnight and futures slipped 0.1 percent in Asia. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.2 percent, while Japan’s tearaway Nikkei paused for breath and was flat.
“The two projected hikes were viewed as hawkish initially,” said Steve Englander, head of G10 currency research at Standard Chartered in New York, but traders soon unwound that a bit as Powell struck a balanced tone in his news conference.
“The market takeaway was that rates would stay high for longer, rather than spike upwards in line with the shift in projected Fed funds rate.”
Fed leaves rates unchanged, sees two small hikes by end of 2023
Two-year Treasury yields jumped as much as 13.5 bps in the session, before settling two bps higher at 4.69 percent. Ten-year yields fell 3 bps to 3.79 percent.
Fed funds futures pricing didn’t budge all that much, but expectations for a hike next month firmed a little and traders pushed any hopes for cuts deeper into 2024.
“The conditions we need to see … to get inflation down are coming into place,” Powell said. “But the process of that actually working on inflation is going to take some time.”
China slowdown
In Asia the focus was on China where industrial output and retail sales figures fell short of market forecasts in the latest sign the economic recovery isn’t living up to hopes.
China’s economy slows in May, firming case for more support
China cut a key benchmark, its medium-term loan rates, by 10 bps and the yuan hit a six-month low of 7.1783 per dollar.
“Expectations are building that additional stimulus will come from Beijing and this could be the much needed catalyst for the Chinese market to overcome a disappointing first half,” said Tai Hui, Asia-Pacific chief strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
Elsewhere strong Australian jobs data leant some support to the Aussie dollar, which was broadly steady at $0.6786, while the New Zealand dollar was on the ropes after data showed the economy shrank into recession this year.
That likely confirms an end to rate hikes and the kiwi was last down 0.7 at $0.6163.
The euro, which has been grinding higher on the dollar for about two weeks on signs of slowing U.S. inflation and hints of cooling in the labor market faces its next test when the ECB meets later in the day. A 25 bp hike is expected.
In Japan data showed exports unexpectedly rose in May, but the pace of growth was a crawl. The yen slipped about 0.5 percent to 140.74 per dollar, though moves were capped ahead of a Bank of Japan meeting on Friday.
Oil dipped slightly with benchmark Brent crude futures down 0.16 percent to $73.08 a barrel.
Gold, which pays no income, was pressured by expectations for U.S. interest rates to linger at high levels, and fell to a two-week low of $1,934 an ounce.
Bitcoin dropped 3 percent overnight and nursed losses at $25,049.