Asia stocks were mostly weaker on Tuesday, with investors possibly fretting about the implications of further Fed tightening after strong manufacturing data boosted bets for a hike in May. Investors are also unlikely to be buying aggressively ahead of upcoming bank earnings, keen to see if any have been affected by turmoil in the sector. Goldman Sachs and Bank of America report later in the day while Morgan Stanley is on Wednesday. JPMorgan, Citigroup and Wells Fargo have all beaten Wall Street forecasts but State Street tumbled more than 9% overnight after fee income fell. Japan equities, though, were on track for an eighth straight day of gains, feeding off a weakening yen and some buoyant domestic financial results. The European stock open will be watched closely after the week started with a pullback from one-year highs, ending a five-day winning run.
Bank Indonesia is widely expected to leave its key rate unchanged for a third consecutive meeting in the coming hours, one of a growing number of central banks which are opting to watch how policy tightening so far plays out in the economy. For the Reserve Bank of Australia, the decision to pause last month after 10 consecutive hikes was a close one, minutes of the meeting revealed, and a potential return to tightening is very much alive.
Key developments that could influence markets on Tuesday:
UK labour data German ZEW survey Goldman Sachs, BofA earnings (Reporting by Kevin Buckland; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)