Stocks slip

SINGAPORE- Asian stocks backed away from 2-1/2-month highs on Wednesday and the dollar found support as investors’ tempered some of their earlier enthusiasm about the prospect of an end to US interest rate hikes.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was off 0.54 percent , retreating a bit having gained more than 3 percent since a week ago and hitting its highest since September on Tuesday. Japan’s Nikkei rose 0.29 percent .

Overnight the S&P 500 snapped a five-session winning streak and fell 0.2 percent .

Chipmaker Nvidia reported revenue well above Wall Street expectations after market close, but shares fell 1.7 percent due to the company’s downbeat China sales outlook.

Nasdaq futures were down about 0.2 percent and S&P 500 futures were little changed in Asian hours. Volumes are likely to be lightened through the rest of the week by Thursday’s Thanksgiving holiday in the United States.

European share markets are set for a muted open, with Eurostoxx 50 futures up 0.05 percent , German DAX futures 0.08 percent higher and FTSE futures up 0.06 percent .

“It appears that the short cover rally that began after the November (Fed meeting) is winding down and that buying and selling is beginning to alternate,” said Nomura’s chief macro strategist Naka Matsuzawa in a note to clients.

The Federal Reserve released minutes from that meeting overnight though traders judged that policymakers’ promise to “proceed carefully” from here was not new information.

Ten-year Treasury yields were marginally lower at 4.3910 percent in Asia trade. They have fallen about 50 basis points since the Fed held rates steady early in the month.

Interest rate futures markets see almost no chance the Fed hikes again and price about 90 basis points of rate cuts through 2024, with a 30 percent chance they begin as soon as March.

“Since the (Fed) believes that a soft landing is in sight, it would be foolish to risk it by hiking further than necessary,” said Rabobank’s senior US strategist Philip Marey.

“If we were to see stronger economic and inflation data before the December meeting, longer-term rates are likely to rebound and substitute for a rate hike. Therefore we do not expect further hikes.” – Reuters

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