Asian shares slipped and the dollar held firm on December 10 as traders edged away from riskier assets amid renewed concerns about COVID-19 and ahead of key inflation data from the United States that could set direction on Federal Reserve (Fed) rates.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan lost 0.4 percent and Japan’s Nikkei shed 0.5 percent. Overnight the S&P 500 lost 0.72 percent and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.71 percent. S&P 500 futures rose 0.14 percent in Asian hours.
Shares and risk-friendly currencies had performed well earlier in the week, with MSCI’s regional benchmark posting its best day in two months on December 7, helped by indications the Omicron strain of the new coronavirus might not be as economically disruptive as first feared.
“Then, as we got towards the end of the week the fact that Europe was much more clearly moving into a sort of lockdown light and cases are going up, and COVID-19 case numbers in the US are starting to ratchet up flipped things a little bit,” said Rob Carnell, head of research Asia Pacific at ING.
“Also there is a slight sense of ‘let’s not have too much risk on the table for the weekend’. Of course, there is CPI out in the US – but I think we’ve all woken up to the fact that there is inflation in the US now,” he added.
US consumer price index (CPI) for November is due later on December 10 and a Reuters poll of economists expect it to have risen 6.8 percent year-on-year, overtaking a 6.2 percent increase in October, which was the fastest gain in 31 years.
Any upside surprise will likely be interpreted as a case for a faster Fed taper and sooner interest rate rises.
Shares in China Evergrande Group lost 1.5 percent after Fitch downgraded it to restricted default status. The Hong Kong benchmark lost 0.24 percent but global markets have been much less concerned by the latest development in the long running Evergrande saga than they were a few months ago.
“This issue has been going on for two and a half months now, and markets don’t seem to be as fussed because a default on Evergrande’s offshore debt has seemed highly likely,” said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital.
Also in China, the central bank on December 9 directed financial institutions to hold more foreign exchange in reserve for a second time this year, which markets interpreted as an attempt to slow down a recent rapid appreciation of the yuan.
The yuan lost about half a percent in offshore trade on December 9, and weakened further on December 10 to 6.385.
Other currency moves were in line with the broad risk off mood. The dollar held firm, the euro, which dropped 0.4 percent overnight stayed under pressure, while the Aussie dollar wobbled lower.
US Treasury yields slipped a little overnight with benchmark 10-year Treasury notes last at 1.4888 percent.
Oil also skidded. US crude dipped 0.5 percent to $ 70.56 a barrel. Brent crude fell 0.47 percent to $ 74.08, while gold, however, edged higher on the worries. The spot price rose 0.2 percent to $ 1777.8 an ounce.