Dollar strengthens as US CPI fails to excite; Asian stocks decline

Dollar strengthens as US CPI fails to excite; Asian stocks decline

SYDNEY, Aug 11 (Reuters) – Asian stocks edged towards a weekly loss on Friday‍ and the U.S. dollar was headed for a month of gains after⁢ U.S. inflation‌ came in steady, without the ⁤hoped-for surprise on the downside.Soft ⁣demand at⁣ a 30-year Treasury auction and a blowout in the U.S. budget deficit last month also weighed⁤ on‌ bonds, and their higher yields ⁢in turn pushed the dollar up -⁤ particularly against a yen ‌pinned by yield control in Japan.The yen‌ touched⁢ a six-week low of 144.89 per dollar in⁣ early trade‌ on Friday, though volumes were thinned owing to a⁤ public holiday in Japan. Its stock markets were​ closed and Treasuries went untraded ‍in the Asia​ session.MSCI’s broadest index⁢ of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) edged ‍0.2%​ lower and headed for a 1% weekly loss.Headline U.S. CPI was 0.2% last month, the same ​as⁣ a month earlier, and the details were encouraging – with core goods inflation slowing down and only rents⁣ proving‌ stubbornly sticky.Yet a few hours later San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly ‌told Yahoo Finance that while this was ‍welcome, there‌ “is still more work to do” for policymakers.”I think the market⁣ was hoping with that inflation data that we’d hear Fed speakers⁢ say it’s unlikely we’ll have to hike any ‌further, and the next move is a cut,” said Andrew Lilley, chief ​rates strategist at investment bank Barrenjoey in Sydney.Benchmark 10-year ⁢Treasuries initially rallied on the inflation headlines, but yields were seven basis points higher​ at ‍4.11% by the close of trade in New York. Two-year yields rose two‍ bps to 4.82%.Thirty-year yields jumped six bps to 4.24% after a $23 billion auction landed a basis ​point above where the market was trading. Primary dealers were ⁢left with 12.5% ⁣of‌ the sale.”That fuelled concerns that the markets⁣ are struggling to digest what is‌ now‌ a meaningfully larger supply story from the U.S. ‍Treasury,” said Sally ​Auld, chief investment officer at wealth manager JB⁣ Were in ⁢Sydney.The July U.S. budget⁣ deficit also came in at $221 billion, more than double market expectations, to take the year-to-date deficit beyond $1.6 trillion – compared with less than half of that a‌ year earlier – and the ​momentum ⁤foreshadows more borrowing.DOLLAR GAINSIn foreign exchange markets, choppy trade in the wake of the inflation data release left the dollar on ⁢course for a weekly gain ⁢as traders figured that one certainty⁢ is that U.S. rates will not be going down for a while.The euro is down marginally for⁣ the week at $1.0988. The yen was eyeing a weekly loss of 2% as traders judged the Bank of Japan’s‍ looser cap on 10-year yields as buying time for shorter-dated rates ⁢to stay low.In stock markets, Chinese property stocks were ​taking a fresh beating on giant developer Country Garden (2007.HK), which is struggling with its debts, forecasting a $7.6 billion ​net loss in the first half. Country Garden ‍stock ‌fell 11%. An index of‍ mainland developers (.HSMPI) fell 2.3% to​ a nearly three-week low.Hong⁣ Kong shares in…

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