Stock, bond rally takes a breather before year-end: Markets wrap

← Go back Dec 12, 2023

Stocks fell across Asia, following US declines, as optimism over the prospect of Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts waned and investors trimmed holdings before year-end. The MSCI All Country World Index of shares headed for a second day of loses after it had powered ahead for the previous nine sessions. Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 stock indexes fell 1.5% on Wednesday. Treasuries traded in a narrow range as did most currencies with volatility easing as the year-end holiday season approaches. “The dovish tone by the Fed in December has been grossly over exaggerated in terms of its impact on asset prices,” Mark Konyn, chief investment officer at AIA Company Ltd. said on Bloomberg Television. “The market will be little disappointed in terms of when those cuts start to take effect.” Japanese stocks were among the biggest losers in Asia while technology-heavy markets of South Korea and Taiwan also dropped. Chinese stocks were mixed as mainland shares rebounded after Wednesday’s selloff. US consumer confidence jumped in December, according to data released Wednesday, suggesting the Federal Reserve need not be in a hurry to cut interest rates. US data due Thursday include third-quarter GDP and weekly initial jobless claims. Toyota Motor Corp shares slid after subsidiary Daihatsu Motor’s offices were raided over a safety scandal and the automaker recalled 1 million cars in the US. The raid came after revelations the carmaker and supplier manipulated the results of collision safety tests dating as far back as 1989. Citigroup Inc. decided to exit the distressed-debt trading business, according to people briefed on the matter. Morgan Stanley, meanwhile, considered allocating a portion of its balance sheet to a new private credit fund, according to people with knowledge of the plans. FedEx Corp., a bellwether for the US economy, reported diminished profits, heightening concerns about a slump. In commodities, oil fell toward $74 per barrel, trimming a gain from Wednesday, while gold steadied after falling Wednesday to trade close to $2,030 per ounce. Bitcoin edged higher, building on Wednesday’s gains with the Securities and Exchange Commission facing a Jan. 10 deadline to reject or approve ETFs. The token rose as high as $44,294 on Wednesday. Friday looks potentially busy with data releases including UK GDP, US consumer sentiment and so-called core personal-consumption expenditures price index — the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge. Key events this week: Some of the main moves in markets:

Read more: moneyweb

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