Business

Asian stocks rally ahead of key US inflation data

Analyst expect CPI growth to slow to 8%, driven mostly by falling gasoline prices

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 13 Sep 2022 12:00PM

Asian stocks rally ahead of key US inflation data
Stocks rose in Japan, Australia, Singapore and Taiwan at the open, with Hong Kong, South Korea and Shanghai also gaining after reopening following a public holiday. – AFP pic, September 13, 2022

HONG KONG – Asian stocks continued a global rally this morning, ahead of the release of key US consumer price data that is expected to show slightly slowing inflation in the world’s largest economy.

Stocks rose in Japan, Australia, Singapore and Taiwan at the open, with Hong Kong, South Korea and Shanghai also gaining after reopening following a public holiday.

US consumer price index (CPI) data will be released today, with analysts expecting inflation to slow to 8%, driven mostly by falling gasoline prices. US inflation hit a 40-year high in June, touching 9.1%.

The ease in inflation, however, is unlikely to slow the pace of the US Federal Reserve’s tightening of monetary policy, with another 75-basis-point interest rate hike expected at its meeting next week.

The Fed has already instituted two consecutive rate hikes of that amount, and in recent days, bank chief Jerome Powell has indicated that the increases will continue until inflation is tamed.

While the overall US inflation number is expected to slow, prices for food and housing are expected to have increased, raising the strain on household budgets.

“Risks remain skewed to the upside, due to an uncertain outlook for key inputs, including agricultural and energy commodities, as well as the pass-through of wage gains in a tight labour market,” according to Barclays US analysts Pooja Sriram and Jonathan Hill.

Last week, the European Central Bank also adopted a policy of monetary tightening, raising its key rate by a historic 75 basis points, with analysts expecting a similar-sized increase at the next policy meeting in October.

‘Locked in’

US stocks yesterday ended bullish: the broad-based S&P 500 advanced 1.1%, continuing the upswing last week that snapped a three-week losing streak.

“Wall Street is locked into Tuesday’s inflation report that will likely show pricing pressure relief but will not change the Fed from maintaining an aggressive stance of tightening monetary policy,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda.

“Even if inflation falls below the 8% level, the Fed should still deliver a 75-basis-point rate hike at the September 21st policy decision.”

The euro stabilised in early Asian trading to 1.0125 against the dollar today, after a surge a day earlier that saw it gain 1.4% against the US currency and 1.6% against the yen, before paring those increases in later trading.

Oil prices today were down by close to a percentage point, as investors continue to speculate on the effect of slowing demand in overheating major markets, especially in China, where a harsh zero-Covid-19 policy continues to negatively affect economic activity.

In addition to US CPI figures today, other key data expected later this week will include US retail sales and industrial production on Thursday; China home and retail sales as well as industrial production on Friday; and Euro area CPI, also on Friday. – AFP, September 13, 2022

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