Asia shares on guard for inflation, earnings tests
SYDNEY – Asian shares started in a muted mood on Monday after Wall Street snapped its winning streak, while investors braced for U.S. inflation data and a corporate reporting season where good results are needed to justify high stock valuations.
Geopolitical tensions were also on the radar as disruptions in the Red Sea raised oil prices and shipping costs in Europe, while the Israeli conflict with Hamas threatened to spread to Lebanon.
There was more promising news from Washington where U.S. congressional leaders agreed on a $1.6 trillion spending deal aimed at averting a partial government shutdown.
READ: Stocks set to snap 9-week win streak on Fed rethink; yen slides
The early action was cautious with MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan barely changed, having retreated 2.5 percent last week.
Article continues after this advertisementJapan’s Nikkei was closed for a holiday, though futures were trading up at 33,490 compared to Friday’s cash close of 33,377. The index has been underpinned by a drop in the yen as the dollar enjoyed a broad bounce.
Article continues after this advertisementS&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures were both up 0.1 percent in early trade.
The S&P 500 lost 1.5 percent last week to break a nine-week winning stretch, which had been its longest since 1989. The index’s 24 percent rally last year means valuations are looking a little stretched so much is riding on the results season.
Major banks including JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup start the reporting rush on Friday with hopes high for upbeat profits.
Consensus forecasts are that S&P 500 profits rose 3 percent on the year, and Goldman Sachs sees risks of an even higher outcome.
“The bar ahead of 4Q results is higher than in recent quarters, but we expect S&P 500 firms in aggregate will beat analyst forecasts,” Goldman said in a note.
“Our baseline 2024 forecast is S&P 500 EPS rises by 5 percent year/year, and we see potential upside from stronger U.S. economic growth, lower interest rates, and a weaker USD.”
Eyeing the CPI
Futures are pricing in around 134 basis points of U.S. rate cuts next year, compared to the Federal Reserve’s dot plot of 75 basis points.
The probability of a move as early as March has been pared somewhat to a still-high 69 percent, and that will likely shift again depending on Thursday’s U.S. consumer price report.
READ: US consumer inflation lifted by rising rent costs in November
Forecasts are for core CPI to rise 0.2 percent in December, pulling annual inflation down to 3.8 percent and its lowest since mid-2021.
Analysts at TD Securities are tipping an increase of just 0.1 percent thanks to a large drag from used car prices and slowing rents.
There are at least four Fed speakers on the docket this week to offer their outlooks, with New York Fed President John Williams likely to be the most influential.
Inflation data from China and Tokyo are also due this week, with analysts looking for deflation to ease a touch in China.
In currency markets, the dollar was building on its recent bounce to reach 144.77 yen having climbed 2.5 percent last week from 140.80.
The euro was a fraction lower at $1.0934, after slipping 0.9 percent last week.
The dollar’s rally was a headwind for gold, which was flat at $2,043 an ounce.
Oil prices edged higher as the troubles in the Red Sea threatened to disrupt supplies and add to shipping costs.
Brent added 19 cents to $78.95 a barrel, while U.S. crude rose 12 cents to $73.93 per barrel.