Wall Street, European, and world stocks powered through that headwind, Japanese stocks got a lift from the yen’s slide back through 161.00 per dollar, and Chinese stocks drew strength from a positive surprise in domestic manufacturing sector data.
But broad measures of Asian and emerging equities flatlined and they may struggle to rebound meaningfully, if at all, in the face of such a sharp rise in dollar-denominated borrowing costs.
There isn’t anything on the local economic and policy calendar that looks like giving markets a significant steer on Tuesday, with only South Korea inflation and retail sales from Hong Kong scheduled for release.
It’s ‘Groundhog Day’ for yen traders, on intervention watch again with the yen mired at 38-year lows against the dollar. Japanese authorities have not shown their hand yet – could they be waiting for the July 4 U.S. holiday to catch the market off-guard and get maximum impact?
Chinese markets opened the new quarter with a spring in their step after the release on Monday of surprisingly upbeat manufacturing purchasing managers index.