Asian market sentiment later in the week could be molded by a batch of Chinese economic indicators: trade, lending and money supply figures for April on Tuesday, and CPI inflation on Thursday.
These reports will give investors a clearer insight into how well the region’s largest economy is doing after abandoning its COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.
The signs are mixed at best. The heavily indebted property sector remains under severe stress, April’s PMI reports were soft, and the economic surprises index – at a 17-year high a few weeks ago – has now declined 13 days in a row.
Economic momentum is clearly slowing.
Technology giant JD.com <9618.HK> and China’s largest chip foundry Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp <0981.HK> both release first-quarter earnings on Thursday.
Figures on Sunday, meanwhile, showed that China FX reserves rose $21 billion in April to $3.205 trillion, higher than expected and the highest since February last year.
Potentially market-moving events later in the week include: G7 finance ministers meeting in Niigata, Japan from Thursday through Saturday, Bank of Japan minutes of its April 27-28 policy meeting on Wednesday, and the Bank of England‘s policy meeting on Thursday.