Market Insights

Chip Stocks Plunge and Drag Asian Markets Lower

 

Chip stocks were hammered on Thursday, sending most Asian share markets lower, after worrying signals from Micron Technology overnight about excess inventories and weak demand.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index tumbled 2.7%, with its tech stocks slipping more than 5%. Mainland Chinese shares also declined, with blue chips falling 1.2%.

Japan’s Nikkei lost 0.4% and South Korea’s Kospi dropped 1.1%, each led by declines in heavyweight chip players.

Overnight, the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index slumped 4.3% after Micron said it would reduce memory chip supply and make more cuts to its capital spending plan.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq slumped 1.5% while the S&P 500 slid 0.8%. Emini futures indicated little respite at the reopen, trading about flat.

ALSO SEE:

Micron Begins Production of High-Capacity Chip in Japan

 

 

Dollar Rebounds

Meanwhile, the US dollar rebounded after stronger-than-expected US retail sales suggested the Federal Reserve was unlikely to ease up in its battle with inflation.

That fuelled concerns about the economic outlook, with the US Treasury yield curve remaining deeply inverted in Tokyo trading and suggesting that investors are braced for recession.

“Inflation is likely to remain elevated for some time … because in the US, at least, it’s services that are driving inflation, and that can have greater persistency,” Salim Ramji, global head of ETFs and index investments at BlackRock, told the Reuters Global Markets Forum on Wednesday.

“(In equities) minimum volatility strategies can help investors stay invested while reducing risk,” he said.

Investors are also re-assessing the US monetary policy outlook after consumer spending figures contradicted the narrative of the past week or so from cooler consumer and producer price data.

 

 

Fed Officials Still Hawkish

Rhetoric from Fed officials on Wednesday also remained hawkish. Fed Governor Christopher Waller said there was still a ways to go on rates, while San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly told CNBC that pausing rate hikes was not yet part of the discussion.

“Fed commentary, like the resilient spending numbers, gave little succour for anyone looking for an imminent pivot,” Ted Nugent, a markets economist at National Australia Bank, wrote in a client note.

Money markets currently give 93% odds that the Fed will slow to a half-point rate hike on December 14, with just 7% probability of another 75 basis point increase.

However, traders still see the terminal rate close to 5% by next summer, up from the current policy rate of 3.75-4%.

The US dollar index, which measures the currency against six major counterparts, added 0.28% to 106.57, rebounding from a slide as low as 105.30 on Tuesday following the release of producer price inflation numbers.

The euro sank 0.3%, while the risk-sensitive Aussie dollar slipped 0.6%.

US 10-year Treasury yields recovered modestly from a six-week low at 3.671% hit overnight in Tokyo trading, last standing at 3.725%, while the two-year yield continued to consolidate near its lowest level since October 28 around 4.38%.

Gold slid 0.6% to around $1,762 an ounce amid a stronger dollar.

Crude oil continued to decline in Asia after settling more than a dollar lower overnight, following the resumption of Russian oil shipments via the Druzhba pipeline to Hungary and as rising Covid cases in China weighed on sentiment.

Brent crude futures dropped by $1.04, or 1.1%, to $91.83 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell $1.14, or 1.3%, to $84.45 a barrel.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

 

China Home Prices See Biggest Drop in Seven Years in October

 

US, Europe Chase Cheaper EV Battery to Curb China Dominance

 

China Urging Retired Soldiers to Help Foxconn iPhone Plant

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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