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A look at the day ahead in Asian and global markets
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By Jamie McGeever, Columnist, Global Finance & Markets
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Asian financial markets brace for Chinese GDP figures on Wednesday, the key number in a batch of Chinese indicators to be released as investors also try to navigate a heavy flow of global economic, market and geopolitical cross currents.
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A view shows destroyed buildings in the Gaza Strip as seen from Israel’s border with the Gaza Strip, in southern Israel October 15, 2023. REUTERS/Amir Cohen
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Wall Street closed flat to slightly lower on Tuesday, after forecast-busting U.S. retail sales data stoked expectations for another Fed rate hike by year-end and pushed Treasury bond yields sharply higher.
This was set against some upbeat Q3 results from Wall Street giants like Bank of America, although chipmakers fell after the U.S. government said it planned to halt shipments of advanced artificial intelligence chips to China.
On top of that, the Middle East crisis appeared to deepen significantly after Palestinian health authorities said an Israeli air strike on a hospital in Gaza killed around 500 people. Israel has denied conducting the attack. This comes on the eve of President Joe Biden’s planned visit to Israel on Wednesday.
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Graphics are produced by Reuters.
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Short-dated U.S. bond yields on Tuesday surged to new historic peaks – the two-year yield near 4.25% and the five-year yield nudging 4.90%, levels last seen in 2006 and 2007, respectively.
Blame bumper U.S. retail sales, which also sparked a spree of upward revisions to U.S. growth forecasts. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is now running at 5.4% annualized growth for Q3.
Compare that with China.
Annualized and year-on-year growth measures are different, but the general picture is still one of a booming U.S. and sluggish China – figures on Wednesday are expected to show a 4.4% annual rate of growth in the July-September period.
That’s the median estimate in a Reuters poll of 60 economists, and would mark a notable slowdown from 6.3% in Q2. The poll’s range is 3.5% to 5.1%. Bear in mind that the government’s 2023 GDP goal is for growth of around 5%.
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Staying in China, the country’s largest private property developer Country Garden is lurching toward defaulting on its offshore debt if it is deemed not to have made a $15 million coupon payment on Tuesday.
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Non-payment of this tranche will trigger cross defaults in other bonds. With nearly $11 billion of offshore bonds and $6 billion of offshore loans, a Country Garden default would tee up one of China’s biggest corporate debt restructurings.
The property sector has been a major drag on growth, driver of deflationary pressures, and trigger for the huge outflows from China’s stocks, bonds and currency this year.
The U.S. dollar, meanwhile, is creeping higher against Asia’s two biggest currencies, pushing Japan’s yen and China’s yuan back down to key areas that their central banks are sure to be monitoring closely – 150.00 yen and September’s 16-year high above 7.34 yuan.
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Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Wednesday:
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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
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