TOKYO, Sept 7 – Asian stocks sank on Thursday, extending global equity declines after new signs of sustained inflationary pressures in the United States boosted the case for elevated interest rates for longer.
The US dollar hung close to its highest point since mid-March against major peers, and touched a fresh 10-month top to the yen. Long-term Treasury yields hovered near two-week highs near 4.3%.
Brent crude stayed above USD 90 amid tightening supply, adding to inflation worries.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares slid 0.68% after declines on Wall Street and in Europe.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng and an index of mainland Chinese blue chips eached dropped about 1%. Australia’s benchmark lost 1.24%.
Japan’s Nikkei sagged 0.64%, on course to snap an eight-session win streak.
US stock futures pointed to a 0.2% decline after a 0.7% slide for the S&P 500 overnight.
German DAX futures were down 0.36% and UK FTSE futures FFIc1 slipped 0.26%.
Wall Street stocks sold off after U.S. data showed the services sector unexpectedly picked up steam in August, suggesting stubborn inflationary forces.
Although traders are still fairly certain the Federal Reserve will forego a rate increase this month, they put the risk of one by year-end at closer to a coin toss. A rate cut is not expected until June.
“The data doesn’t flip the script, but it shows the war against inflation hasn’t been won,” said Kyle Rodda, senior financial markets analyst at Capital.com in Melbourne.
“It all goes back to the discussion of where that magical neutral rate happens to be,” he said. “While the markets are still feeling around for where that rate may be, it’s going to weigh on equities and support the US dollar.”
The dollar index – which measures the currency against six developed-market peers, including the yen and euro – ticked up 0.07% to 104.93. It jumped to the highest since March 15 on Wednesday at 105.03.
The dollar earlier reached its strongest level since Nov. 4 versus the yen at 147.875.
The currency pair tends to move in step with long-term Treasury yields, which stood at 4.29% on Thursday after pushing to their highest since Aug. 23 at 4.306% in the previous session.
The euro, meanwhile, drooped 0.1% to USD 1.0716, following its dip to a three-month trough of USD 1.0703 on Wednesday.
Elsewhere, the People’s Bank of China continued its bid to shore up the yuan by again setting strong official midpoints for the currency.
Despite those efforts, the yuan continues to hover on the weaker side of the closely watched 7.3 per dollar level in offshore trading, last changing hands at 7.3332. It sank to the lowest since early November at 7.3490 in the middle of last month, undercut by a rapidly deteriorating property sector and the risk of spillover into broader markets.
China trade data released Thursday, while not as dire as economists predicted, still showed a nearly 9% slide in exports and a more than 7% drop for imports.
The Australian dollar, which often trades as a proxy for its top trading partner, eased 0.26% to USD 0.6366, keeping it close to this week’s 10-month low.
“Another set of poor Chinese economic data is not helping,” Joseph Capurso, a strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, wrote in a client note. “The absence of a large package to stimulate the Chinese economy will remain a weight on AUD for the near term at least.”
Crude paused its steady climb of the past two weeks during Asian hours on Thursday, as worries about Chinese demand offset some of the effects of expectations for a fall in U.S. inventories and extended supply cuts by Saudi Arabia and Russia. O/R
Brent crude futures fell 24 cents to USD 90.36 a barrel, after a nine-session winning streak. US West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) futures fell 29 cents to USD 87.25 after a seven-session gain.
(Reporting by Kevin Buckland; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
This article originally appeared on reuters.com