SYDNEY – Asian stocks traded sideways on Tuesday, as concerns over the spread of the Delta variant and expectations of earlier tapering by the Federal Reserve offset strong corporate earnings, while gold and oil recovered after their sharp falls, Reuters reported.
Markets were also cautious ahead of US inflation numbers on Wednesday, which coming soon after strong jobs data, could fuel more speculation about the Fed’s bond-purchase taper.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was 0.17% higher in mid afternoon after trading most of the day in slight red territory, with China’s blue chip index CSI300 also recovering to be 0.43% higher, while South Korea’s KOSPI index was 0.64% weaker.
Other markets were set to open lower with S&P 500 futures dipping 0.12%, Euro STOXX 50 futures down 0.01% and FTSE futures off 0.15%.
“Equities have pretty much tracked sideways, but commodities are slightly weak and that’s partly reflecting Covid-19 uncertainty because cases seem to be increasing and background concerns of a slowdown in China,” said TD Securities Asia-Pacific strategist Prashant Newnaha.
In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index was 0.78% higher, while the Shanghai Composite traded 0.42% higher, and Japan’s Nikkei was up 0.22%.
Gold prices also recovered, after touching a four-month low on Monday as strong US jobs data bolstered expectations of an early tapering of the Federal Reserve’s economic support measures.
Officials also said inflation was at a level that could satisfy one leg of a key test for the beginning of interest rate hikes.
“That probably weighted on equities slightly,” added Newnaha.
China on Monday reported more Covid-19 infections in what seems to be its most severe resurgence of the disease since mid-2020, as some cities added rounds of mass testing in a bid to stamp out infections.
Australia’s benchmark S&P/ASX200 was 0.32% higher on the back of strong earnings results, despite the nation’s most populous state recording its sharpest daily increase in coronavirus cases.
Oil prices recovered on Tuesday after falling as much as 4% in the previous session, which extended last week’s steep losses amid a rising US dollar and concerns that new coronavirus-related restrictions in China could slow a global revival in fuel demand.
U.S. crude oil futures were trading at $66.98 per barrel, up $0.5 or 0.75%. Brent crude was at $69.37, up $0.33 or 0.48% higher.
The strong jobs data lifted US Treasury yields. Benchmark 10-year notes were last yielding 1.3135%, down slightly after surging from last week’s low of 1.1270%.
“Having swum from a very inflation-better opinion this year to a very disinflation view up to a week or so again, what we are we getting now again is another rotation into some of the reflation trades,” said Sean Darby, a Jefferies strategist in Hong Kong.
“The only thing that is different between now and the last 12 to 19 months is that it is likely to be accompanied by a stronger dollar.”
US stock indexes were mostly soft on Monday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average closing down 0.3%, the S&P 500 off 0.09% and the Nasdaq Composite adding 0.16%.