Economic news

Asian Shares Fall on Chipmaker Drag; US Jobs Data Looms

  • Nikkei falls 1.4%, South Korea down almost 5%
  • European stocks set for steady open, Wall St futures up a tick
  • Oil hits fresh four-month lows, easing inflation worries
  • Traders wary of strong jobs figures that would support rate hikes

SYDNEY, July 2 (Reuters) - Asian shares extended declines ​on Thursday as investors rotated out of chipmakers after a stellar quarter, while currency and bond markets braced for U.S. ‌jobs data that could give pointers to the risk of interest rate hikes.

Oil prices hit new four-month lows, with Brent crude down 1% at $70.88 a barrel, as U.S. President Donald Trump said talks with Iran had gone well in Qatar, and more oil tankers transited through the Strait of Hormuz.

European shares are expected to open steady, with ​regional stock futures little changed.

Wall Street futures edged up 0.2% after a selloff in semiconductor shares overnight, though Meta Platforms jumped ​nearly 9% on reports it was building a cloud business to sell excess AI computing capacity.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific ⁠shares outside Japan fell 1.2%, while Japan’s Nikkei dropped 1.4%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index bucked the trend, with a gain of 0.9%.

South Korea’s ​KOSPI sank 4.8%, extending Wednesday's slide of 2%, after an eye-watering second-quarter surge of 68% on soaring AI-related demand for memory chips. SK Hynix plunged ​8.5% and Samsung tumbled 7.2%.

"The plunge in Asia semis today is more about a hangover from Wall Street," said Fabien Yip, a market analyst at IG, adding that profit-taking appeared to be key driver.

"Layered on top is Apple's reported outreach to restricted Chinese memory makers for China-market devices, which introduces pricing threat to the Korean and Japanese ​incumbents."

Investor attention is squarely on U.S. non-farm payrolls data due on Thursday this month due to a holiday on Friday for Independence Day, which ​falls on a Saturday this year.

Economists polled by Reuters expect a rise of 110,000 jobs for June, but forecasts range widely from gains of 25,000 to 200,000, ‌suggesting ⁠high chances of a surprise. The jobless rate is forecast to stay steady at 4.3%.

"Ideally, equity players want a Goldilocks outcome: respectable job creation, a stable unemployment rate," said Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone.

"Anything that avoids a marked increase in the implied probability of near-term rate hikes is likely to be welcomed by equity bulls."

At the Sintra Forum, Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh said inflation risks had eased recently, offering only short-lived relief ​to Treasuries.

Warsh also said he would ​stick firmly to the 2% inflation ⁠target and "disappoint" anyone who expected loose monetary policy. Markets currently price in about 80% odds of a rate hike in September.

Treasury yields have been climbing as traders braced for a potentially strong jobs number, which could ​see bets for a near-term rate hike ramp up.

U.S. 2-year yields rose 2 basis point (bp) on Thursday to ​4.1806%, and were ⁠up 9 bps so far this week. 10-year yields also climbed 2 bps to 4.4911% and were up 12 bps this week.

Higher Treasury yields kept the U.S. dollar supported.

The euro was steady at $1.1385, having eased 0.4% overnight after European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said inflation and growth risks were becoming more broadly ⁠balanced.

The dollar ​slipped 0.1% to 162.39 yen, having hit a fresh 40-year high of 162.84 on ​Wednesday.

The yen's slide has drawn the usual warnings of intervention from Tokyo, although the impact of interventions in April and May proved short-lived, despite authorities expenditure of almost 12 trillion ​yen.

Gold bounced 0.7% to $4,059 an ounce after a drop of 14% in the second quarter.

Reporting by Stella Qiu; Editing by Kevin Buckland and Clarence Fernandez

Source: Reuters


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