By Jamie McGeever
(Reuters) — A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.
Unexpectedly high U.S. producer price inflation figures on Wednesday could cool this week's rally in emerging market and Asian stocks, with local attention on Thursday turning to Indian consumer inflation.
Indian CPI for September tops the regional calendar, which also includes Indian trade data, bank lending, corporate goods inflation and machinery orders form Japan, and the latest snapshot of industrial production from Malaysia.
On the corporate front Fast Retailing — the Japanese operator of global clothing chain Uniqlo — is expected to report a full-year profit of 374.6 billion yen ($2.52 billion), which would be a new record.
But the tone of trading across Asian markets on Thursday may be a little more cautious than some of the headline moves on Wednesday indicate, and may also hinge on the U.S. yield curve.
Emerging market stocks on Wednesday had their best day since July 25 and the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index rose over 1% for its best day in more than a month.
Most of these gains were fueled by a powerful short-covering rally in U.S. Treasuries that triggered a sizeable decline in government bond yields around the world, especially at the back end of the curve.
But ugly U.S. producer inflation data at the U.S. open on Wednesday — monthly, annual, headline and core readings were all higher than expected — was a reality check for those betting the Fed is all but done raising rates.
The U.S. yield curve flattened more on Wednesday than any single day since March 16, but for 'good' and 'bad' reasons.
The initial 'bull' flattening in Asia and Europe, led by strong buying of long-dated bonds, that pushed
Read more on investing.com