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HomeMarketAsian markets rebound after Wall Street sinks on rate fears

Asian markets rebound after Wall Street sinks on rate fears

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BEIJING — Asian stock markets rebounded Tuesday after Wall Street sank under pressure from worries about higher interest rates and after Japan reported stronger wage gains than expected.

The Nikkei 225
NIK,
-0.00%
in Tokyo gained 0.1% after the government reported wages rose 4.8% over a year earlier in December. That was close to a three-decade high as workers press for higher pay to keep pace with inflation.

The Shanghai Composite Index
SHCOMP,
+0.33%
rose 0.3% and the Hang Seng
HSI,
+0.84%
in Hong Kong advanced 1%.

The Kospi
180721,
+0.54%
in Seoul added 0.6% and Sydney’s S&P/ASX 200
XJO,
-0.52%
slipped 0.4%. Stocks in New Zealand
NZ50GR,
-0.56%
and Singapore
STI,
-0.25%
declined while Taiwan
Y9999,
+0.10%
and Indonesia
JAKIDX,
+0.93%
advanced.

Wall Street sank for a second day Monday after unexpectedly strong U.S. data on hiring and wages dampened hopes the Federal Reserve might decide it has succeeded in cooling inflation and can wind down plans for more rate hikes.

Traders were looking ahead to a planned speech by Fed Chair Jerome Powell in Washington for possible clues about interest rate plans.

Expectations for the Fed to reverse course quickly are unrealistic, Clifford Bennett of ACY Securities said in a report.

“The mismatching of financial market pricing and economic reality is both stark and stretched,” Bennett said.

On Wall Street, the benchmark S&P 500 index
SPX,
-0.61%
fell 0.6% to 4,111.08. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-0.10%
lost 0.1% to 33,891.02 and the Nasdaq composite
COMP,
-1.00%
tumbled 1% to 11,887.45.

The yield on the two-year Treasury, which tends to track expectations for the Fed, leaped by an unusually wide margin to 4.47% from Friday’s 4.29% and the previous day’s 4.1%.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which helps set rates for mortgages and other important loans, jumped to 3.64% from 3.52% late Friday.

The Fed and central banks in Europe and Asia are trying to extinguish inflation that is at multi-decade highs by cooling economic activity. Traders worry they might be willing to tip the global economy into recession to achieve that.

Friday’s employment data showed the U.S. economy added twice as many jobs as expected last month despite higher interest rates. That is good for workers but the Fed worries wage gains will push up inflation. That fuels fears the U.S. central bank might push rates higher.

In energy markets, benchmark U.S. crude
CLH23,
+1.04%
gained 83 cents to $74.94 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 72 cents to $74.11 on Monday. Brent crude
BRNJ23,
+0.94%,
the price basis for international oil trading, advanced 81 cents to $81.80 per barrel in London. It added $1.05 the previous session to $80.99.

The dollar
USDJPY,
-0.28%
fell to 132.17 Japanese yen from 132.67 yen.

Credit: marketwatch.com

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