Markets react ahead of Trump address to Congress

Asian stocks declined on Monday while European markets saw a generally higher start

Investor interest is focused on US President Donald Trump’s speech to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, where he is expected to unveil some elements of his plans to cut taxes. Photograph: Reuters
Investor interest is focused on US President Donald Trump’s speech to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, where he is expected to unveil some elements of his plans to cut taxes. Photograph: Reuters

Asian stocks declined on Monday, led by financials, as a renewed drop in sovereign bond yields on political concerns prompted some investors to move to the sidelines after a recent equities rally.

European stocks indicated a generally higher start, according to IG Markets predictions.

Much interest is focused on US president Donald Trump's speech to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, where he is expected to unveil some elements of his plans to cut taxes.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.3 per cent, near the day's lows. The index, which fell 0.7 per cent on Friday, is still up more than 11 per cent since end-December.

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Japan finished 0.9 per cent lower, and Australia off 0.3 per cent.

Japanese shares fell to 2½ week lows on concerns that a stronger yen would crimp corporate earnings.

"Investors recently confirmed that Japanese corporate earnings will likely be strong next fiscal year. But if the dollar falls below 110 yen, such hopes will change," said Takuya Takahashi, a strategist at Daiwa Securities.

On a forward valuation basis, Asia-Pacific shares are trading at a price/earnings multiple of 15 times compared to nearly 19.6 times in the US and 16 times in Europe, according to Thomson Reuters data.

"Until we see some strong earnings, we are in for a correction phase," the head of equities at a US fund in Hong Kong predicted.

Though US stocks clawed their way to a higher close on Friday, major indices spent much of that day’s session in negative territory, suggesting increased caution. Index futures were barely in the green.

Bond signals

Sovereign bond yields fell on Friday, pushing yields down in Australia and Japan on Monday, as a renewed flight to safety bid thanks to weak stock markets and a looming election in France that poses a key political risk for markets.

Investors fear far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen might win the presidential election this year and lead France out of the euro zone.

Polls show Le Pen losing to either centrist Emmanuel Macron or right-wing François Fillon, but few people are willing to count her out.

Ten-year German bond yields have dropped nearly 30 basis points so far this month, far outpacing a 13 basis point decline in yields of comparable US debt.

In Asia, yields on five-year Japanese benchmark debt plumbed to their lowest levels since mid-November, at minus 0.14 per cent, while 10-year Australian bonds edged three basis points lower to 2.71 per cent.

In currencies, the dollar scored some early gains against the Chinese yuan and the Philippine peso but remained in narrow ranges against major currencies.

Many investors have a core overweight position on the greenback betting on a rebound in the global economy, firmer commodity prices and a US rate hikes. Goldman Sachs Asset Management expects the dollar to gain against the Aussie, kiwi and the yen.

In commodities, Brent crude rose 0.75 per cent to $56.43 per barrel while US West Texas Intermediate was up 0.6 per cent at $54.33 per barrel as a global supply glut appeared to ease.

– Reuters