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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares mixed on Fed warning, China acts on property

SYDNEY, Nov 14 (Reuters) – Asian share markets were mixed on Monday as a top U.S. central banker warned investors against getting carried away over one inflation number, while Chinese stocks gained on signs of aid for the country’s hard-hit property sector.

A modest miss on U.S. inflation was enough to see two-year Treasury yields dive 33 basis points for the week and the dollar lose almost 4% – the fourth biggest weekly decline since the era of free-floating exchange rates began over 50 years ago.

However, the resulting easing in U.S. financial conditions was not entirely welcomed by the Federal Reserve, with Governor Christopher Waller saying it would take a string of soft reports for the bank to take its foot off the brakes.

Waller added the markets were well ahead of themselves on just one inflation print, though he did concede the Fed could now start thinking about hiking at a slower pace.

Futures are wagering heavily on a half-point rate rise to 4.25-4.5% in December, and then a couple of quarter-point moves to a peak in the 4.75-5.0% range.

Two-year yields edged up to 4.42%, after diving as deep as 4.29% on Friday.

“The CPI downside surprise aligns with a broad range of indicators pointing to a downshift in global inflation that should encourage a moderation in the pace of monetary policy tightening at the Fed and elsewhere,” said Bruce Kasman, head of economic research at JPMorgan.

“This positive message needs be tempered by the recognition that downshift in inflation will be too little for central banks to declare mission-accomplished, and more tightening is likely on the way.”

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 1.1%, after jumping 7.7% last week.

Japan’s Nikkei eased 0.8%, while South Korea went flat. S&P 500 futures dipped 0.3% and Nasdaq futures lost 0.5%.

EUROSTOXX 50 futures gained 0.4%, while FTSE futures tacked on 0.1%.

EYES ON CHINA

Dealers were also waiting to see if Chinese stocks could extend their big rally amid reports regulators have asked financial institutions to extend more support to stressed property developers. China’s real estate index jumped 5% in response. Blue chips rose 1.1%, helped by a slew of changes to China’s COVID curbs, even as the country reported more cases over the weekend.

“It’s hard to see how the case news is anything but negative from an economic standpoint, but it’s the symbolism of the movement, however small, in the zero COVID strategy that markets are happily latching onto,” said Ray Attrill, head of FX strategy at NAB.

U.S. President Joe Biden will meet Chinese leader Xi Jinping in person on Monday for the first time since taking office, with U.S. concerns over Taiwan, Russia’s war in Ukraine and North Korea’s nuclear ambitions on top of his agenda.

The news on COVID rules had stoked a short-covering bounce in the yuan, which added to broad pressure on the dollar as yields dived. The yuan was set 1.4% firmer on Monday – the largest such move since 2005.

The dollar index was up a fraction on Monday at 106.920 , but still well short of last week’s 111.280 top.

The euro eased a touch to $1.0308, after climbing 3.9% last week, while the dollar firmed to 139.49 yen following last week’s 5.4% drubbing.

The dollar lost almost as much to the Swiss franc, steered in part by warnings from the Swiss National Bank that it would use rates and currency purchases to tame inflation.

Sterling eased back to $1.1755 ahead of the British Chancellor’s Autumn Statement on Thursday, where he is expected to set out tax rises and spending cuts.

Crypto currencies remained under pressure as at least $1 billion of customer funds were reported to have vanished from collapsed crypto exchange FTX.

Bitcoin was trading down 1.5% at $16,055, having shed almost 22% last week.

The dollar’s recent retreat provided a much-needed fillip to commodities, with gold holding at $1,760 an ounce after jumping more than $100 last week.

Oil futures extended their gains on hopes for a pick-up in Chinese demand, with Brent up 28 cents at $96.27 while U.S. crude rose 20 cents to $89.16 per barrel.

(Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Kenneth Maxwell)

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Fed may cut size of rate increases, but is not ‘softening’ inflation fight, Waller says

WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 (Reuters) - The US Federal Reserve may consider slowing the pace of interest rate hikes at its next meeting but could not be seen as a "softening" in its commitment to lowering inflation, Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said Sunday.

Markets must now pay attention to the "end point" of rising interest rates, not the speed of each move, and that end point is likely "a long way off," Waller said in response to a barrage of questions about monetary policy at an organized economics conference. by UBS in Australia. "It depends on inflation."

"We're at a point where we can start to think maybe going to a slower pace," said Waller, but "we're not easing down... Stop paying attention to speed and start paying attention to where the end point is going to be. Until we drop inflation, that endpoint is still out there."

A report released last week showing slower-than-expected inflation in October was "good news," but "just one data point" must be followed by other similar readings to show conclusively that inflation is slowing, he said.

The 7.7% annualized increase in inflation recorded in October is still "a huge one," Waller said, noting that even if the Fed reduced the three-quarter-point hike to half a point at its next meeting, "you're still going up." "We need to see a continuation of this kind of behavior and inflation slowly starting to come down before we really start to think about taking our foot off the brakes," Waller said, adding that he was growing more confident in the Fed. is on the right track as its rate increase has so far not "ruined anything".

The Fed has raised interest rates by 3.75 proportion points this year starting in March, including four three-quarter point hikes, a swift shift in monetary policy aimed at cooling a wave of inflation that has weakened since the 1980s. "For all the talk about destroying the economy and destroying financial markets. It just doesn't work," Waller said. Analysts and economists have argued that monetary tightening will increase the risk of a recession, impacting employment. US Senate Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown last month urged the Federal Reserve to exercise caution in implementing monetary policy so that millions of Americans already suffering from high inflation will also lose their jobs.