Asia shares extend gains; wary eye on Japan yields

SYDNEY : Asian shares looked to end the month on a firm note on Monday in a week littered with major economic releases, central bank meetings and earnings updates from mega caps Amazon and Apple, though rising Japanese bond yields were a risk.

The early impetus for shares was positive following Friday’s U.S. data showing an easing in wage costs and core inflation, which fuelled hopes the Federal Reserve was done tightening.

“The data surprises bolster confidence that global core inflation – ex. China – will fall sharply and set the stage for a developed market central bank policy pause and emerging market easing even if growth remains firm,” said Bruce Kasman, head of economic research at JPMorgan.

Figures due this week include the U.S. ISM surveys on manufacturing and services, the July payrolls report and European inflation. China factory surveys are due later on Monday.

The Bank of England is widely expected to raise rates by at least a quarter point, but markets are more divided on whether the Reserve Bank of Australia will hike or stay on hold.

Almost 30 per cent of the S&P 500 report results this week and, so far, earnings have been good enough to see the index extend its rally to 10 per cent since the start of June.

S&P 500 futures added another 0.1 per cent on Monday, bringing its gains for July to almost 3 per cent, with Nasdaq futures up 0.2 per cent.

Apple Inc and Amazon.com both report on Thursday, while other well-known names with results due include Western Digital Corp, Caterpillar Inc, Starbucks Corp, and Advanced Micro Devices.

Asian markets have also been trending higher, with China’s benchmark index enjoying a 4.5 per cent jump last week on hopes for more stimulus from Beijing.

Early on Monday, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan edged up 0.1 per cent, having gained 4.9 per cent so far in July to reach a five-month high.

PARSING THE BOJ

Japan’s Nikkei rose 1.0 per cent to re-take the 33,000 level and nudge closer to its recent three-decade peak.

Investors are still pondering the implications of Friday’s shock decision by the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to lift the lid on bond yields, in a step away from its ultra-easy policies.

Analysts at BofA estimate the BOJ’s bond buying added $1.3 trillion to global liquidity in the past 18 months and provided a low floor for global rates, so any sustained rise in Japanese government bond yields could ripple though other bond markets.

Japanese 10-year yields climbed further to 0.6 per cent on Monday, still short of the new cap of 1.0 per cent and limiting the boost to the yen. While the yen initially rallied on the BOJ move, it soon reversed course, and the dollar climbed from 138.05 yen to as high as 141.18 late on Friday.

On Monday, the dollar was off slightly at 140.78 yen, with investors still seeming happy to run carry trades, or yen-funded positions in higher-yielding currencies.

“Friday’s action might best be viewed as an attempt to head off a fresh wave of yen-weakening carry trade activity, by at least ceasing to resist pressure for 10-year yields to rise above 0.5 per cent,” said Ray Attrill, head of FX strategy at National Australia Bank.

“Friday’s actions do, though, fail to provide a catalyst for a secular reversal of yen weakness.”

The euro had also recovered from its initial pullback to stand at 155.17 yen, while steadying at $1.1026 after some wild swings last week.

In commodities, gold was steady at $1,957 an ounce, having gained around 2 per cent for the month so far.

Oil prices have climbed for five weeks in a row as production cuts by OPEC+ tightened supply.

Brent was off 9 cents on Monday at $84.90 a barrel, while U.S. crude eased 6 cents to $80.52.

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