Global Market Quick Take: Asia – February 8, 2024

Macro 7 minutes to read
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Summary:  The S&P 500 touched the 5k mark, driven by gains led by tech stocks, and the Nasdaq 100 also closed at record highs. In after-hours trading, Disney rose by more than 6%, and Arm Holdings surged by 38%, fueled by strong earnings, while Softbank is set to report today. However, China sentiment moderated again as there was a lack of follow-through on support measures, and focus will be on the inflation report today. Bond markets were choppy amid mixed NYCB headlines and a strong 10-year auction, keeping the dollar sideways. On the currency front, AUDNZD, however, broke below the key 1.07 support.


 The Saxo Quick Take is a short, distilled opinion on financial markets with references to key news and events. 

US Equities: The Nasdaq 100 and the S&P 500 reached new highs, closing 1% and 0.8% higher at 17,755 and 4,995, respectively, driven by broad-based gains. In after-hours trading, Walt Disney surged by 6.6% after reporting earnings that surpassed expectations. Arm Holdings also experienced a notable surge of more than 25% after raising its full-year guidance and offering upbeat comments on the outlook of the semiconductor industry.

Fixed income:  Treasury yields edged modestly higher by around 2 basis points across the yield curve, with the 2-year yield and the 10-year yield settling at 4.43% and 4.12%, respectively. The auction of $42 billion of 10-year notes saw robust demand.

China/HK Equities:  The Hang Seng Index pulled back from yesterday’s strong gains as skepticism persisted regarding the sustainability of a state intervention-driven rally in the mainland A-share market. The Hang Seng Index slid 0.3% to 16,082, and the Hang Seng Tech Index dropped by 1.6%. In the mainland, the CSI300 Index extended its gains, rising 1% to 3,344, and The Shanghai Composite Index added 1.4% to 2830. Today marks the last trading day of the A-share market before the six-trading-day-long Lunar New Year holiday.

After the Hong Kong market closed, Alibaba reported results largely in line with analyst estimates. For the December quarter, revenue rose 5.1% Y/Y to RMB260.3 billion, while adjusted net income fell 4% to RMB48.2 billion, and adjusted EPS dropped by 2% to RMB0.19 per ADS. The e-commerce giant also announced an increase in its share buyback program by USD 25 billion, bringing the total outstanding commitment to USD 35.3 billion over the next three years, or nearly 18% of the market cap. However, investors expressed concerns about the management’s remark regarding a substantial increase in investments in the Taobao and Tmall segments. Alibaba’s ADS dropped by 5.9% to USD 73.64, equivalent to a 3.9% decline versus the closing level in Hong Kong on Wednesday.

FX: Dollar traded sideways amid lack of key data in the US and Fed commentaries mostly priced in, while choppy yield moves underpinned amid mixed NYCB headlines. CHF was the G10 underperformer after SNB forex reserves rose for the second consecutive month in January, which sparks potential talk of currency interventions. USDCHF surged to YTD highs of 0.8750 with EURCHF zooming past 0.94. Kiwi retained its strength following a jump above 0.61 post employment data release yesterday, while AUDUSD unable to push above 0.6540 as AUDNZD breaks below the key 1.07 support. EURUSD maintained a slight upward bias, but stalled at 1.0780 for now and ECB’s economic bulletin will be in focus today.

Commodities: US natural gas closed below $2 as winter demand slowed and heating season is seen coming to a close. Crude oil, however, rose for a third consecutive day amid signs of stronger demand as US gasoline inventories fell more than expected. EIA reported a decline of 3.15mn barrels last week in gasoline inventories while distillate stocks dropped by 3.2m barrels. Our Commodity Strategist discusses his views on crude oil and fuel market in this article. Gold was steady amid gyrations in yields, and is still awaiting a clearer rate cut path to start showing strength.

Macro:

  • The narrative from fed speakers continued to be one of pushback to imminent rate cut expectations. Kugler (voter), a new member of the Fed board, said that every meeting is live, but she broadly highlighted progress on inflation but remained in the camp that the job is not yet done. Barkin (voter) also echoed that it makes sense to be patient on rate cuts. Collins (non-voter) said the Fed is likely to cut rates later this year if the economy meets expectations, adding monetary policy is well positioned for the current outlook.
  • China has appointed Wu Qing as the party chief and chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), replacing Yi Huiman. Prior to this role, Wu served as the deputy party chief of Shanghai. Wu has a background in the CSRC, where he previously handled disciplinary cases in the brokerage industry in 2005 and the fund management industry in 2009. From 2016 to 2017, he held the positions of party chief and chairman of the Shanghai Stock Exchange. It's worth noting that Wu is the first CSRC chief who did not come from the banking sector but is instead a veteran of the securities industry.
  • As of the end of January, China's foreign exchange reserves decreased by 0.6% to $3.22 trillion from a month ago. During the period, China continued to add to its gold holdings for the 15th consecutive month.

     

    Macro events: US Treasury 30-year auction, China CPI (Jan) exp. -0.5% YoY vs. -0.3% prev., ECB Economic Bulletin, RBI and Banxico Policy Announcements. Speakers: BoE’s Dhingra, Mann; ECB’s Elderson, Lane; Fed’s Barkin.

    Earnings: L’Oreal, AstraZeneca, S&P Global, Siemens, Philip Morris, ConocoPhillips, Unilever, SoftBank, NTT,

    In the news:

  • Disney Earnings Top Views on Cost Cuts, Parks; Shares Climb (Bloomberg)
  • Alibaba shares drop 5% after revenue miss, $25 billion boost to buyback plan (CNBC)
  • NYCB names new chairman after Moody’s downgrades bank’s credit rating to junk (CNBC)
  • US Commercial Real Estate Contagion Is Now Moving to Europe (Bloomberg)
  • PayPal sees flat profit in 'transition year,' shares fall (Reuters)
  • Arm forecast beats estimates as AI spurs chip upgrades, shares surge (Reuters)
  • Ford shares surge on dividend boost, lower EV spending (Reuters)
  • Tesla asks which jobs are critical, stoking layoff fears (Reuters)

 

For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.

For a global look at markets – go to Inspiration.


 

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