Asian stocks skid close to one-year low

Singapore — Asian equities slipped on Tuesday, hovering close to a one-year low, as manufacturing activity data from China disappointed while the yen weakened past 150 per dollar after the Bank of Japan tweaked its bond yield control policy.

The yen fell 0.7% against the dollar to touch a session low of 150.12 after the central bank maintained its target for the 10-year government bond yield around 0% set under its yield curve control but redefined 1.0% as a loose “upper bound” rather than a rigid cap.

Under criticism that its heavy defence of the cap is causing market distortions and an unwelcome yen fall, the Bank of Japan had raised its de facto ceiling for the yield to 1.0% from 0.5% in July.

Saxo market strategist Charu Chanana said the new reference range suggests the central bank will allow yields to rise above 1%, while still trying to keep the changes to policy very subdued.

“Speculation of an eventual removal of yield curve control will continue to build. Last week proved that dollar/yen at 150 is not a line in the sand, and this could bring a test of 152,” Chanana said.

The 10-year Japan government bond had yet to trade after the announcement. The yield jumped 6.5 basis points earlier in the day to 0.955%, its highest since May 2013.

A report from the Nikkei newspaper on Monday that said the Bank of Japan is considering adjusting its yield curve control policy helped push the yen to a two-week peak of 148.81 per dollar but the fragile currency gave up all its gains after the bank decision.

The central bank, which maintained its ultra-loose monetary policy, also removed a pledge to defend the 1% level with offers to buy unlimited amount of bonds.

“The bank will buy some bonds around that (1%) level but not unlimited and they’ve shown their hand,” said Tom Nash, portfolio manager at UBS Asset Management in Sydney. “Through all the linguistic contortions, the fact is that they are dismantling yield curve control. A yield cap isn’t a yield cap if you change it every time the market gets close.”

Stocks in Asia fell, with MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan 0.86% lower, hovering close to the one-year low it touched last week.

The Shanghai composite index was 0.38% lower, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 1.77% after China’s manufacturing activity unexpectedly returned to contraction in October, an official factory survey showed on Tuesday.

The data cast a cloud over recent indicators that showed a nascent recovery in the world’s second-largest economy.

Investor focus this week will mainly be on the major central bank meetings, with the US Federal Reserve and Bank of England also due to meet along with Bank of Japan.

On Tuesday, the Fed open markets committee will convene for a two-day monetary policy meeting, which is expected to culminate in a decision to let the Fed funds target rate stand at 5.25%-5.50%.

A slew of recent data showed the US economy remains resilient and comments from Fed chair Jerome Powell will be scrutinised to gauge how long interest rates are likely to stay elevated.

The US treasury department said on Monday it expects to borrow $76bn less this quarter than anticipated in the third quarter on expectations of higher revenue receipts.

The yield on 10-year treasury notes was flat at 4.875%.

The dollar index, which measures US currency against six rivals, rose 0.226%. Sterling was last trading at $1.2145, down 0.18% on the day, while the euro was down 0.2% at $1.0594.

US crude rose 0.36% to $82.61 per barrel and Brent was at $87.81, up 0.41% on the day.

Gold prices were flat after slipping below the $2,000/ounce mark in the last session. Spot gold eased 0.2% to $1,991.39.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za