Financial Conditions Bite Hardest This Year in Morning Bid

Financial Conditions Bite Hardest This Year in Morning Bid

Sept ‍11 (Reuters) – ‍A look at the day ahead in Asian⁢ markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.Asian markets are set for a nervous open​ on Monday as worries mount ‌that last week’s equity ⁤selloff could accelerate, ​financial conditions continue to‍ tighten, and investors brace for a raft of economic⁤ data from⁤ China throughout the week.There ⁤seems to be no obvious market impact from the G20 summit in India, and politically-influenced​ trading will⁣ likely be dominated ‌by U.S.-China tensions. Last week ⁣Apple’s 6% slide wiped $180 billion off its market ‌cap on news that Beijing had banned government employees from using iPhones ‍at work.Broader market sentiment is fragile. ‌The ⁤Nasdaq shed 2% ⁣last week, and the ⁤S&P 500, MSCI World and MSCI Asia ex-Japan Index all fell more ‍than 1%.Tightening financial ‌conditions from high bond yields and a strong dollar, ​and unease about⁢ the looming lag effects of ⁤the Fed’s rate hikes are coming together in what has been historically a notoriously volatile month for stocks.According ⁣to Goldman ‍Sachs’s real-time indexes, financial conditions in ​China, ⁢emerging markets and globally are now the tightest since last November.The dollar is at a six-month high, Asian currencies ⁤are feeling the heat, and⁢ traders ⁤are on intervention⁣ alert – India’s rupee posted a record closing low on ⁢Thursday and the Japanese yen, Philippine peso and Thai Baht are at their lowest levels ‍this year.Currencies may also get direction ‍from ​a sprinkling of key economic indicators across the region this week – Indian trade and inflation, Australian unemployment, Indonesia ⁢retail sales, and Japanese industrial production and machinery orders.The economic data spotlight this week will⁣ shine on China. Beijing often concentrates the release‍ of ⁣key indicators⁤ into short bursts – often referred to as ⁣the ‘Chinese⁢ data dump’ – but this one is particularly heavy.Money supply, loan growth, social financing (a broad ‌measure of credit and liquidity in the economy),⁣ retail⁤ sales, industrial production, unemployment, house ⁤prices and fixed asset investment are all due for release by September 15.That follows producer and consumer price ‌inflation figures on Saturday ‌that suggest disinflationary⁢ pressures are sticky. Annual PPI was negative for the 11th month in a row,‍ and annual ⁤CPI rose only​ 0.1%, undershooting forecasts of a 0.2% increase.The state of China’s economy will be much clearer by ⁤the end of the week, as will the scale of the task facing authorities to​ provide the necessary monetary and fiscal stimulus to ⁤keep Beijing’s goal of 5% GDP growth this year in ⁣sight.But complicating this is the ⁢yuan, which ⁢is at a 16-year low. Further policy easing ⁤will put it under even heavier downward pressure, risking a spiral of ⁤FX depreciation, asset market weakness and capital flight.Here are key⁣ developments that could provide more direction to‍ markets ‌on⁤ Monday:- Malaysia industrial production‌ (July)- Japan⁢ money ⁤supply (August)- U.S. ‍3-year note…

Source from www.reuters.com

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