Asian Stocks Pare Gains as China’s Rally Fades.
Asian equities trimmed their advance after Chinese stock gains fizzled on disappointment over the outcome of a joint ministry press briefing about the property market.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index almost gave up an earlier gain of as much as 0.7% after China’s CSI 300 erased a rally of 1.3%. Chinese officials said the government will expand a program to support “white list” projects to 4 trillion yuan ($562 billion) from about 2.23 trillion yuan already deployed. The negative market reaction shows investors have set an increasingly high bar for stimulus optimism.
“The challenge right now is that we don’t have a big enough package to get people excited,” Jun Bei Liu, a fund manager at Tribeca Investment Partners, said on Bloomberg Television. “Right now the Chinese economy is sitting at the bottom, but to reignite the growth, they really need to reignite confidence.”
Elsewhere, stock benchmarks declined in Japan and South Korea, and rose in Australia. US stock futures dropped.
Chinese data due Friday will show the world’s second-biggest economy expanded 4.5% in the third quarter from a year ago, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg. That would mark its weakest pace in six quarters.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has called on government officials to make every effort to help the country meet its annual growth target of around 5%. However, after a series of press conferences this month in which policymakers offered no details of fresh stimulus, fears are now mounting that efforts may not be enough to revive growth.
China’s fading rally coupled with a selloff in technology companies is souring the outlook for Asian markets. The region’s MSCI equity index is still on course for its best year since 2020, but with traders expecting the Federal Reserve to set back interest-rate cuts and earnings slowing in markets such as India and Korea, risk sentiment needs fresh triggers to sustain momentum.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.’s earnings will be closely watched on Thursday for any signs of slowing demand after ASML Holding NV offered surprisingly dour order numbers and cut its 2025 revenue forecast earlier this week.
Australia’s dollar gained and the nation’s bonds fell after the country’s unemployment rate was 4.1% in September, lower than the forecast of 4.2% in a Bloomberg survey. The Treasury 10-year yield climbed two basis points to 4.03%, and the Bloomberg dollar index was little changed.
Small Caps
Gains for US small-caps on Wednesday indicated investors are shifting out of the world’s largest tech companies that have soared on the back of the artificial intelligence boom and into other stocks that benefit in benign economic conditions.
“Investors may be looking to rotate away from large technology companies, which are widely owned and may have fewer clear catalysts going forward,” said David Russell at TradeStation. “With the election coming and the economy returning to balance, the long-awaited rotation away from megacaps to everything else could finally be at hand.”
Oil climbed, after four days of declines, as traders weighed potential risks to production from the Middle East against concerns over a global glut. Bitcoin fell after rising 1.7% Wednesday to reach its highest level since July.
Iron ore tumbled to a three-week low, a sign that investors doubt whether China’s latest moves to shore up the property market will do enough to boost construction activity and steel demand.
Source: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/asian-stocks-advance-amid-us-222029442.html