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THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2025
Asia shares struggle, dollar soars on lowered Fed rate cut bets

Global Economy

Reuters
16 July, 2025, 11:05 am
Last modified: 16 July, 2025, 02:14 pm

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Asia shares struggle, dollar soars on lowered Fed rate cut bets

US Treasury yields ticked to the highest in more than a month, lifting the dollar against the yen in particular

Reuters
16 July, 2025, 11:05 am
Last modified: 16 July, 2025, 02:14 pm
Pedestrians are reflected on a stock quotation board showing a graph of Nikkei share average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan April 14, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
Pedestrians are reflected on a stock quotation board showing a graph of Nikkei share average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan April 14, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo

Highlights:

  • US CPI showed early signs of inflationary tariff effects
  • Fed's Powell had predicted tariff impact to emerge in the summer
  • Traders price in 43 bps of Fed cuts for remainder of 2025

Asian stock markets were under pressure on Wednesday while the dollar climbed to its firmest against the yen since early April, after US inflation suggested tariffs are pushing prices up, dampening expectations for Federal Reserve policy easing.

US Treasury yields ticked to the highest in more than a month, lifting the dollar against the yen in particular.

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However, tech shares remained resilient following a 4% rally in artificial-intelligence darling Nvidia overnight.

Brent crude continued to hover around $69 per barrel.

Data on Tuesday showed US consumer prices rose 0.3% in June, in line with forecasts, but the largest gain since January. Economists attributed the rise in prices across goods such as coffee and home furnishings to the Trump administration's escalating import tariffs.

The Fed has been keeping interest rates steady as it has waited for indications of the inflationary impact from tariffs, which Chair Jerome Powell had said he expected in the summer.

"We know the revealed preference of Fed Chair Powell, along with a few of his colleagues, is to wait for these tariff impacts to come through, and those in that camp are seeing that view bolstered by this data," Taylor Nugent, senior economist at National Australia Bank, said in a podcast.

As a result, markets saw "a fairly significant trimming of Fed expectations" for rate cuts, Nugent said.

Traders currently price in 43 basis points of rate reductions for the rest of this year, with 56.5% odds of a quarter-point cut in September.

Investors will now carefully monitor producer price data due later on Wednesday, looking for signs of whether inflationary pressures are also building on the factory floor.

Australia's equity benchmark South Korea's KOSPI each lost around 0.6% as of 0127 GMT. Mainland Chinese blue chips slipped 0.1%.

Japan's tech- and exporter-heavy Nikkei was flat after alternating between small gains and losses, supported by both Nvidia's fortunes and the weak yen.

Taiwan's benchmark added 0.5% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng jumped 0.8%, adding to Tuesday's 1.6% tech-driven rally.

US S&P 500 futures eased 0.2%, after a 0.4% decline for the cash index overnight.

Beyond the Fed and US President Donald Trump's tariffs, the earnings season is another focal point for investors.

Results from JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup beat expectations, but were met with a mixed market response. Wells Fargo cut its 2025 net interest income guidance even as it beat second-quarter profit expectations.

Bank earnings due on Wednesday include Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America.

US 10-year Treasury yields rose as high as 4.495% on Wednesday, the highest since June 11.

The dollar stuck close to a multi-week high against major peers. The dollar index was little changed at 98.545 after rising as high as 98.699 on Tuesday for the first time since June 23.

The US currency was steady at 148.785 yen , and earlier rose to 149.04 for the first time since April 3, in the aftermath of Trump's "Liberation Day" tariff announcement.

The euro edged up 0.1% to $1.1612, trying to pull away from Tuesday's three-week low of $1.1593.

Cryptocurrency bitcoin added about 1% to $117,696, as it stabilised following its 6% pullback earlier this week from Monday's all-time high at $123,153.22.

Gold added 0.3% to around $3,332.

Brent crude futures fell 5 cents to $69.16 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate crude futures declined 9 cents to $66.89 a barrel. Both contracts settled more than $1 lower in the previous session.

Top News / World+Biz

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