(Bloomberg) — Asian stocks are set for a cautiously positive start in holiday-thinned trading after the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge came in below expectations on Friday and a US government shutdown was averted over the weekend.
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Australian shares climbed in early trading, with futures in Japan and Hong Kong pointing to gains. Contracts in mainland China eased. US stock futures rose after the S&P 500 Index gained 1.1% on Friday, the biggest increase since Nov. 6, as US personal consumption expenditures increased at the slowest pace since May.
Early gains would offer some respite to global markets after stocks suffered their worst weekly drop in four months as a stream of robust US economic data saw the Fed scale back the number of cuts it anticipates in 2025. With Chair Jerome Powell focused on inflation progress, Friday’s muted numbers will likely have reassured policymakers — and investors — that the economy is cooling despite being robust.
“Lower than expected US core PCE inflation data for November suggests that the Fed may have gotten too negative on inflation,” Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy and chief economist at AMP Ltd., wrote in a note to clients. “Our overall assessment remains that the trend in shares is still up, including for Australian shares, but expect a far more volatile and constrained ride over the year ahead.”
Australia’s 10-year yield fell six basis points in early trading, following a rally in US Treasuries after the PCE data on Friday.
The dollar was steady against major peers after President Joe Biden signed funding legislation to keep the US government operating until mid-March, avoiding a year-end shutdown and kicking future spending decisions into Donald Trump’s presidency.
Sentiment may quickly shift as investors look toward Trump’s inauguration in January and the prospect of sweeping global tariffs, adding to an already torrid time in emerging Asia as sentiment toward Chinese assets wanes.
Asian stocks are set for their first quarterly loss since September 2023 while a gauge of the region’s currencies fell to its lowest in more than two years last week. China’s one-year bond yield slumped below levels last seen in the global financial crisis on Friday, as traders ramped up bets on monetary easing.