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US CPI smile fades, yen raining down.

Asian Markets: What’s Next After the Fed’s Rate-Hiking Campaign?

By Jamie McGeever

(Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in‍ Asian⁣ markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.

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Markets are betting ​that the Fed’s most aggressive rate-hiking campaign in more than 40 years is over. But now what?

Wall Street initially gave a huge thumbs up to U.S.⁤ inflation data that showed some measures of underlying price pressures cooled significantly last month, prompting​ rates futures markets to call an end to the Fed’s tightening cycle.

But the early gains of more than 1% evaporated⁤ as longer-dated Treasury yields started to ​climb again, and the three main indexes closed the day flat to 0.15% higher. Asian markets, therefore, look set to open ⁣on Friday with a more subdued tone.

Investors in Asia will⁤ also have the yen on their radar – the Japanese currency slid to a 15-year low against the euro on Thursday and fell towards 145.00 per ⁤dollar,⁢ around where Japanese authorities intervened heavily last year.

The loss of bullish momentum ​on Wall Street on ‌Thursday as the session progressed⁤ and renewed ‘bear steepening’ of the U.S. yield curve will unnerve some investors.

The short end of ⁢the bond market was a bit more stable, reflecting ⁤the view that the ⁣Fed is done raising rates. Fed fund futures pricing shows a rate⁣ hike next month is off the table completely, and only a 20%⁣ chance of another hike by year-end.

Breakeven inflation rates fell too, generally backing ‌up that dovish view. But the long end of the Treasury curve sold off pretty aggressively once again, and rising long-term yields will do little to support risk appetite, far less boost it.

Other notable market moves on Thursday‍ include oil.‍ WTI and Brent crude closed ‍down 1.7% and 1.3%, respectively, meaning U.S. crude futures now may not register a seventh straight weekly gain, which would mark the best‍ run since May last year.

Currency traders will ⁢be on Japanese intervention alert‍ after the yen’s latest slump. The dollar is nudging 145.00 yen, around where the Bank of Japan spent record yen-buying sums late last year as the yen ⁣hurtled to a 33-year low.

Elsewhere in FX, India’s rupee had its best day ​in a month on Thursday, moving further away from recent all-time lows on the back‌ of reported intervention from the central bank.

The‌ Reserve Bank of India earlier on Thursday held interest rates steady but signaled it will reduce the amount of cash in the banking system to counter inflationary​ pressures from high food prices.

Industrial​ production data from India on Friday is expected to show ⁤that output in June rose 5.0% year on year, slowing slightly from the 5.2% growth in May.

Key Developments for Friday:

  • Hong Kong GDP (Q2)
  • India⁢ industrial production (June)
  • UK GDP (Q2, prelim)

(By Jamie McGeever;⁣ editing by Deepa Babington)

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Read More From Original Article Here: Marketmind: US CPI smile fades, it’s raining yen

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