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Asian Markets Slide as Tech Valuations Worry Investors

  • Stocks fall as investors await US economic data
  • Japan's PM Takaichi to meet BOJ governor as markets speculate on rates
  • Fed rate-cut expectations decrease despite U.S. economic weakness

SYDNEY, Nov 18 (Reuters) - Asian stocks sagged to one-month lows on Tuesday with the heaviest selling in Japan and South Korea's tech-driven markets as earnings at chipmaker Nvidia loom later in the week as a test for valuations across the sector.

Mood-barometer bitcoin was sliding and below $90,000 for the first time in seven months. Japan's Nikkei, down 3%, was headed for its largest one-day fall since April and FTSE and European futures were both down more than 1%.

"It's starting to feel like investor conviction at current levels is fading," said Tareck Horchani, head of prime brokerage dealing at Maybank Securities in Singapore.

"It's less about a sharp catalyst and more about positioning fatigue, valuation sensitivity, and a growing sense that the rally needs a pause," he said.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 1.8% to its lowest level since mid-October. South Korea's KOSPI shed 3.3%, Australia's S&P/ASX200 fell almost 2% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index lost 1.67%.

The weakness across Asia stocks tracked an extended selloff on Wall Street overnight, with markets braced for a flood of economic data releases.

"It's starting to feel like investor conviction at current levels is fading," said Tareck Horchani, head of prime brokerage dealing at Maybank Securities in Singapore.

"It's less about a sharp catalyst and more about positioning fatigue, valuation sensitivity, and a growing sense that the rally needs a pause," he said.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 1.8% to its lowest level since mid-October. South Korea's KOSPI shed 3.3%, Australia's S&P/ASX200 fell almost 2% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index lost 1.67%.

The weakness across Asia stocks tracked an extended selloff on Wall Street overnight, with markets braced for a flood of economic data releases.

"As investors are having closer analysis on the spending, the sustainability and magnitude of that spending, that will feed into more selective investing in the US and across Asia."

In the foreign exchange market the safe havens of the dollar, yen and Swiss franc were bought. The Swiss franc was just on the strong side of 0.80 per dollar. The dollar index was flat at 99.5.

The yen was about 0.15% higher at 155 per dollar, in some relief for Japanese authorities who have been verbally pushing back with increasing concern at yen weakness.

JGBs SLIDE

Japanese government bonds also slumped, sending some long-end yields to record highs, on worries about Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's ballooning spending plans.

Takaichi's meeting with Bank of Japan governor Kazuo Ueda at 0630 GMT was being closely watched, in the first discussions to be held between the pair since the new leader was inaugurated last month

Ueda has signalled the chance of an interest rate hike as soon as next month. But Takaichi and her finance minister, Satsuki Katayama, have made clear their preference for rates to remain low until inflation durably meets the BOJ's 2% target.

"My expectation is that another rate hike will be pushed into 2026. By the first quarter, the BOJ can wait for the outcome of more wage negotiations and it is a conservative organisation and they could continue to wait and see," said Tai Hui, JPMorgan Asset Management's chief market strategist for Asia.

Gold was down 0.87% to $4,008 an ounce while Brent crude futures slipped 0.67% in the Asian session to $63.77 a barrel.

Bitcoin was off almost 2% to slip below $90,000, down about 30% from its peak.

Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Christian Schmollinger

Source: Reuters


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