Asian markets will likely open on the front foot on Monday, following Wall Street's whoosh higher on Friday, but a raft of Chinese economic data and remarks from U.S. Fed Chair Jerome Powell later in the week could quickly shift sentiment. Monetary policy decisions from Australia and Japan on Wednesday and Friday, respectively, will be market-moving events too. Before that however, investors have a deluge of headlines from China this weekend to digest. The annual session of the National People's Congress, and reports from the finance ministry and state planner - the National Development and Reform Commission - have outlined Beijing's broad goals and plans for the year ahead. On the economy, the government said it would aim for growth this year of around 5%, lower than last year's target of 5.5%. It will also take steps to minimize risks in the property sector, intensify its push to make China self-reliant in tech, and the central bank will provide 'forceful' support for economic development. Perhaps most significantly, Beijing said it would boost defence spending by 7.2% - up on last year's rate of increase and outpacing expected GDP growth - as Premier Li Keqiang called for the armed forces to boost combat preparedness.
Beijing's macro, military and geopolitical vision for the next 12 months outlined this weekend comes as investors get more of an insight into how China's economic reopening is progressing with the release of February trade, inflation, and credit and lending data this week. Inflation figures from South Korea, The Philippines, Thailand and Taiwan this week will be closely watched by investors and policymakers alike. With the Fed seemingly on track to tighten policy further, a renewed rise in the dollar could intensify FX-fueled inflationary pressures in Asia. Attention will turn to Japan later in the week, with the release of fourth-quarter GDP data on Thursday and BOJ's policy decision on Friday, the last under the governorship of Haruhiko Kuroda.
Asian stocks have generally underperformed their U.S. and global
peers in recent weeks, but the underlying question still
applies: How long can markets hold up - and volatility stay so
low - in the face of soaring U.S. bond yields, rate and
inflation expectations?
Global bond yields are moving sharply higher too. Something
might be about to give.
Here are three key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Monday: - China's National People's Congress - South Korea inflation (February) - Euro Zone retail sales (January) <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ MSCI Asia ex-Japan - weekly change MSCI Asia ex-Japan - weekly change ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Diane Craft)
Reuters Messaging: rm://jamie.mcgeever.reuters.com@reuters.net/))