Asian Stocks Take a Dive as Wall Street Rally Falters

Asia stocks fall as Wall Street rally stalls© Reuters. A man ​walks ‌past an ⁤electric monitor ⁣displaying Japan’s Nikkei share⁣ average and recent movements, outside a bank ​in Tokyo, Japan,⁢ June 5, 2023. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File ⁢Photo

By Julie ​Zhu

HONG KONG (Reuters) -⁣ Asian shares fell on ⁤Thursday after Wall Street snapped a long winning streak, while Treasury‍ yields were near five-month lows on hopes Britain’s notably soft inflation reading would be ⁢echoed in looming U.S. price data.

The equities rally, which had been driven by falling ⁢interest rates and the Federal ⁢Reserve’s dovish turn, stalled on Thursday ‍even‍ after ⁣U.S. economic data that beat expectations initially⁢ turned the​ major indexes‍ green. A⁤ far‌ steeper-than-expected decline in British inflation also took markets ‍by ‌surprise.

“Three⁢ US​ benchmark averages sharply ​retreated⁤ in the ⁤late session after hitting their respective intraday highs, snapping a more-than-one-week⁢ winning streak. ​This could be due⁣ to an⁤ overbought ‌market as rate cuts optimism ran out of steam,” said ​Tina ⁤Teng,⁣ market analyst at CMC Markets (LON:).

“Global government bond yields accelerated falling due to ‍risk-off sentiment.”

Investors ⁣on Thursday will be monitoring the Indonesian central ⁤bank’s latest policy decision, consumer ​price inflation and trade ⁣figures from Hong‍ Kong, and producer price inflation data ⁤from South Korea.

Early in the Asian trading day, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific⁤ shares outside ⁣Japan was ‌down 0.6%,⁤ after U.S. stocks tumbled to close sharply lower‌ in the previous session. ‌The index is up​ 1.7% so far this month.

U.S. stock futures, the‌ , were up 0.17%.

Australian shares were ⁢down 0.4%, while ‌ stock⁣ index slid 1.49%.

China’s blue-chip CSI300 index remained ⁣flat in ⁣early trade. It is on track for ⁣a sixth straight weekly loss, which could‌ be its worst weekly performance ‍in 12 years and a record fifth⁢ consecutive monthly loss.

Hong Kong’s ‌opened ⁣down 0.86%.

On Wednesday, an abrupt mid-afternoon nosedive ended​ Wall Street’s impressive rally.

All three major ‌U.S. stock indexes, which were at or near record highs this week, veered lower⁣ late in the session to end 1.3%⁤ to ‍1.5%⁣ below Tuesday’s close.⁢ The fell ⁢1.27%, the lost 1.47% and the ​dropped 1.5%.

In U.S. ​Treasuries, the ​yield on benchmark ⁣ reached 3.8603% compared with its U.S. close of 3.877%‌ on⁢ Wednesday when it fell to an almost⁢ five-month month low⁢ as government bond⁢ yields‍ fell globally after the‌ British inflation data.

The two-year yield, ⁣which​ rises with traders’ expectations of ⁤higher‌ Fed fund rates, touched ‍4.3503% compared‍ with a U.S. close⁢ of 4.369%.

In currencies, the , which tracks⁣ the greenback against ⁣a basket of ⁢currencies of other major trading ‌partners, was down at‍ 102.38. The greenback on Wednesday strengthened⁢ against​ sterling after‌ the British inflation data fuelled⁢ speculation of rate cuts by ⁤the Bank of England.

Sterling was last trading at‍ $1.2644, ​up 0.06% on the day,

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