Asian markets muted as traders warily eye more Fed rate hikes

Asian markets muted as traders warily eye more Fed rate hikes

Stocks sink in Hong Kong, but markets are little changed elsewhere

BEIJING — Asian stock markets declined Monday after Wall Street ended last week lower and China tightened anti-virus controls.

The Nikkei 225 NIK, 0.56% in Tokyo lost 0.1% while the Hang Seng HSI, -1.16% in Hong Kong tumbled 1.6%.

The Shanghai Composite Index SHCOMP, +0.42% gained 0.1% after the Chinese government tightened controls on movement in the southern business center of Shenzhen following virus outbreaks.

The Kospi 180721, 0.63% in Seoul lost 0.2% while Sydney’s S&P/ASX 200 XJO, 0.41% was flat. Benchmarks in Taiwan Y9999, -0.08% and New Zealand NZ50GR, -0.22% declined while Singapore STI, +0.31% and Indonesia JAKIDX, +0.86% advanced.

Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 index SPX, -1.07% ended down 1.1% on Friday after U.S. government data showed hiring slowed in August. The number of jobs added still was big enough that forecasters said the Federal Reserve might see it as evidence more interest rate hikes are needed to bring down inflation that is at a four-decade high.

Asian trading may be “muted to lower” after Wall Street’s “failed attempt” at a rebound following the jobs report, said Yeap Jun Rong of IG in a report.

Traders are uneasily watching the Fed after chair Jerome Powell said Aug. 26 that interest rates have to stay elevated to extinguish pressure for prices to rise. That dashed hopes the Fed might back of due to signs U.S. economic activity is cooling.

The Fed has raised interest rates four times this year, twice by 0.75 percentage points, triple its usual margin.

Central banks in Europe and Asia also have raised rates, fueling worries they might derail global economic growth.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -1.07% also fell 1.1% on Friday after the Labor Department reported the U.S. economy added 315,000 jobs in August. That was down markedly from July’s 526,000, but average hourly pay also jumped by an unusually wide margin of 5.2% compared with a year earlier.

Forecasters warned that high wage gains might reinforce the Fed’s belief that more aggressive rate hikes are needed.

The Nasdaq composite COMP, -1.31% lost 1.3%.

The U.S. market has given up much of the gains made in July and August when traders hoped the Fed might ease up.

Traders expect another 0.75 percentage point rate hike at this month’s Fed meeting, according to CME Group.

Also Friday, Russian state-run energy giant Gazprom announced a suspension of gas supply through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline to Germany might be prolonged. The company said last Wednesday the flow of gas would be stopped for three days due to urgent maintenance work.

In energy markets, benchmark U.S. crude CLV22, 2.51% gained $1.48 to $88.35 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 26 cents to $86.87 on Friday. Brent crude BRNX22, -0.34%, the price basis for international oil trading, added $1.59 to $94.61 per barrel in London. It advanced 66 cents the previous session to $93.02.

The dollar USDJPY, -0.20% advanced to 140.28 yen from Friday’s 140.13 yen.

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