Sydney - The yen retreated after the biggest jump since July and emerging-market stocks rose as investors assessed the impact from Donald Trump’s efforts to rework US trade pacts and comments from US Treasury Secretary nominee Steven Mnuchin on the dollar’s strength.
The dollar pared earlier losses sparked by Mnuchin’s comments that a strong US currency could have a negative short-term effect on the economy. Equities in Tokyo fell to the lowest of the year while the MSCI Emerging Markets Index headed toward a three-month high.
Gold retreated after touching the highest since November while oil climbed toward $53 a barrel. The yield on 10-year Australian bonds fell a second day.
While investors have been looking for details on campaign promises to boost growth and government spending, much of the incoming administration’s initial pronouncements targeted trade or pushed companies to invest more inside the US President Trump promised a “very major” border tax and signed an executive order to withdraw the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal.
“The first couple of days of the new presidency have seen the rhetoric weighted toward protectionist policies while little detail is yet available on stimulus measures,” said Ric Spooner, Sydney-based chief analyst at CMC Markets Asia.
Trump’s pro-growth campaign-trail pronouncements helped drive a rally
in equities and the dollar after his November election victory. Those
trades have been largely unwinding this month as investors assess
whether the moves had pushed prices too far, too fast.
Meanwhile, money managers are turning their focus to earnings from some of the world’s largest companies, with Alphabet and Alibaba among those reporting results this week.
Here are the main moves in markets:
Currencies
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index slid less than 0.1% as of 08:24, after dropping as much as 0.3% earlier. The greenback has fallen for four straight weeks, the longest retreat since February.
The yen fell 0.3% to ¥113.02/$, after jumping 1.7% the previous session. The Australian dollar fell 0.2% and the New Zealand dollar slipped 0.1% after strengthening to levels last seen in November. The Mexican peso increased 0.4%.
Stocks
The Topix fell 0.6% to the lowest since December 7, led by declines in banks and exporters. The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index fluctuated between gains of 0.3% and losses of as much as 0.1%.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index rose 0.7%, after a two-day slide. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index headed toward the highest closing price since October, with Indonesia’s benchmark up 0.6%.
Vietnam stocks are trading near the highest since 2008, while those in Singapore, Taiwan and Thailand are at levels unseen in more than a year. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng added 0.2% and the Shanghai Composite Index advanced 0.1%.
Futures on the S&P 500 Index slipped less than 0.1% after the gauge fell 0.3% on Monday. The Stoxx 600 benchmark index of European shares fell 0.4% on Monday to the lowest close since December.
Bonds
The yield on the 10-year Treasury was steady at 2.40% after it declined seven basis points on Monday; bonds had extended their rally after Trump vowed “a very major border tax” on imports in a meeting with business leaders. Australian bonds gained in the wake of Treasuries, with the yield on 10-year notes down six basis points to 2.70%.
Commodities
Gold slipped 0.3% after climbing 0.7% on Monday and touching a two-month high of $1 220.26 an ounce. West Texas Intermediate crude rose 0.4% to $52.97 a barrel as Iraq said it’s close to implementing its share of pledged output curbs agreed with OPEC to trim bloated global inventories and stabilize the market.
Oil slid 0.9% the previous session after US drillers added the most rigs in more than three years. Copper futures advanced 0.4%, increasing for a third day on prospects of stronger demand this year from the US and China. Iron ore jumped 6% for its first gain in five days.
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