(Bloomberg) — Asian stocks markets opened on a cautious note Tuesday ahead of key economic data from China and after stocks on Wall Street eked out small gains late in the session.
Shares were slightly higher in Japan while benchmarks fell in South Korea and Australia. Futures for Hong Kong pointed to small declines. The possibility of further Federal Reserve policy tightening lifted Treasury yields and constrained US stocks, with the S&P 500 erasing losses in afternoon trading and the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 underperforming major equity benchmarks.
The dollar was fractionally higher versus its major counterparts, adding to gains of the past two days. Government bond yields in Australia and New Zealand rose in the slipstream of moves Treasuries overnight.
Treasuries were little changed at the Asia open, with yield on the two-year note just below 4.2%. Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said he wants to see more evidence that US inflation is easing back to the central bank’s goal of 2%. New York state manufacturing activity unexpectedly expanded in April for the first time in five months as new orders and shipments snapped back.
Much of the focus in Asia will be on China and the strength of its economic recovery. Figures on Tuesday are projected to show gross domestic product expanded 4% in the first quarter from a year earlier, well below the government’s target for full-year growth of around 5%. March data may show increases in industrial output, investment and retail sales.
Meanwhile, minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia’s policy meeting earlier this month will be parsed for signs that rates may be lifted again after a pause, while Indonesia’s central bank is expected to keep its benchmark unchanged.
A gauge of cross-asset volatility remained at 14-month low, reflecting a growing assurance that the worst of the banking turmoil and US rate hikes may be over. The VIX Index, another volatility measure, sat below 17, its lowest since the start of last year.
Still, US bank earnings on Monday didn’t entirely relieve investor nervousness that the sector can quickly bounce from turmoil that roiled several lenders earlier this year, as a so-called earnings recession in the world’s biggest economy looms.
Charles Schwab Corp. rose as executives said the firm can weather the turmoil roiling US banks, while pausing stock buybacks in response to the industry’s worst crisis since 2008. State Street Corp. fell as it reported clients retreated from its investment products.
With the earning season starting, “we’ve had estimates be revised lower for this quarter, they’re down around 7%, which is a pretty low bar to step over and I think you’re starting to see companies do that,” Walter Todd, chief investment officer at Greenwood Capital, said on Bloomberg Radio. “The risk lies in the second half of the year, perhaps in the earnings that need to be revised down in that period.”
“The risk-reward for equities does not look attractive into the second half in light of risk-free hurdle rate at 5%,” a team of strategists at JPMorgan Chase & Co., including Marko Kolanovic, wrote in a note. “The main disconnect revolves around the hopes of a soft landing with inflation coming down quickly.”
Elsewhere, oil was steady after West Texas Intermediate posted its biggest loss in a month on Monday. Gold was little changed.