Asia stocks slide as rate hikes continue

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Asia stocks have fallen for the second day in a row and are headed for their worst week in two months after a slew of central banks raised interest rates and warned there were more hikes to come next year.

Interest rates went up in Britain, Switzerland, Denmark, Norway, Mexico and Taiwan on Thursday following a United States rate hike on Wednesday.

Central bankers’ vows to keep on raising rates until inflation is tamed had markets worried about a potential recession.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.65 per cent and was down 2.1 per cent on the week.

Japan’s Nikkei fell 1.5 per cent.

Overnight on Wall Street the S&P 500 had its biggest percentage drop in more than a month and fell 2.5 per cent.

Longer-dated bonds were firm and the US dollar rallied.

“Central banks are still hawkish, still intent on raising rates,” Asia currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Singapore Alvin Tan said.

“So there’s a tension between the central banks being more hawkish than the market has been expecting, and that dichotomy has been emphasised over the past 48 hours by both the Fed and the European Central Bank,” he said.

On Thursday the European Central Bank made a 50 basis point hike like the Fed, with both opting for a smaller increase than previously, but it flagged that there were more hikes to come than investors had expected.

ECB President Christine Lagarde said current information predicates “another 50 basis point rise at our next meeting and possibly at the one after that, and possibly thereafter”, prompting traders to jack up Europe’s rate expectations.

“This is not a pivot,” she said of the smaller rate rise.

“We are not slowing down, we are in for the long game.”

European bond yields jumped, with two-year German yields leaping 24.2 bps, their biggest one-day rise since the 2008 financial crisis.

The Bank of England announced a 50 bp hike, too, and forecast more.

Even Norges Bank, which began hiking in September last year and has raised rates by 275 basis points since then, hiked 25 bps on Thursday and said it isn’t finished.

In China, where markets are churning around an uncertain reopening, relief at the apparent resolution of a long-running accounting access dispute with the US was not enough to drive a rally, and the Hang Seng fell one per cent.

The prospect of higher near-term rates also has investors nervous about longer-run growth as there are growing signs that a worldwide slowdown is gathering pace.

Japan’s manufacturing activity shrank at the fastest pace in more than two years in December, a corporate survey showed on Friday.

US retail sales fell more than expected in November as some of the consumption momentum ebbs away from the economy.

Ten-year Treasuries rallied a little bit, with the yield falling five basis points, before steadying in Asia at 2.4736 per cent.

Larger moves were in currencies, where the dollar arrested its recent slide with its sharpest jump in two months.

The dollar index rose 0.9 per cent.

The dollar jumped 1.7 per cent and through its 200-day moving average on the yen, where it was last broadly steady at 137.37 yen.

The Aussie dollar had its worst session in two years and dropped 2.4 per cent.

“This time it wasn’t US bond yields driving the move, instead it was just a feeling that if Fed policy remains tighter for longer … it could be tough going for risk assets,” strategists at ANZ bank said in a market note.

“The Fed may not be hiking as fast, but it still has the highest policy rate in the G10 and will be one of the few central banks to take policy (rates) past five per cent.”

Gold fell against the rising dollar, dropping 1.7 per cent to sit at $US1777 ($A2,645) an ounce in Asia.

Oil gave back some recent gains with Brent crude futures down 1.8 per cent overnight and steady on Friday at $US81.33 ($A121.06) a barrel.

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