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Markets Drop Across Asia

Following a promising start to the week, major Asian markets showed declines over the course of trading on Wednesday. Recurring concerns about the effects of American monetary policy as well as the continuing hostilities in Ukraine and lockdowns in China may be the culprit.

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Tokyo, Hong Kong Reverse Gains

Much as on the other side of the Pacific, key stock markets from Hong Kong to Tokyo posted modest rises in value over the first two trading days of the week. On Monday and Tuesday, the Japanese Nikkei-225 rose by 0.4%, while Hong Kong traders pushed the Hang Seng Index (Hong Kong 50) up 2% on Monday.

However, it seems that the significant market volatility that depressed major Indices across the world throughout the first quarter of 2022 could be returning as the investor mood turns risk-averse again. The Nikkei (Japan 225) had fallen by nearly 1.6% by the end of trading in Tokyo today, while the Hang Seng fell 1.9%. Furthermore, the China A50 Index (CN) fell 0.3%. Given that drops in Asian Indices sometimes presage similar trends in other markets from Europe to the United States, this shift in market sentiment might be a cause of concern for traders who had hoped that some analyst predictions foreseeing a bull market would be fulfilled sooner rather than later.

Fed Comments Roil Markets

New information that reframed several persistent macroeconomic issues are behind today’s bearish trading tendencies, according to many market experts. Inflation, the economic fallout of the conflict in Ukraine, and the COVID-19 pandemic may not be news to many savvy traders, but they were enough to shift the mood on some key Asian trading floors today.

Following last month’s decision to raise interest rates for the first time since before the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, the stage seemed set for the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which sets the course of the U.S.’ monetary policy, to take a hawkish turn. While record inflation has been a central concern for key American policymakers for several months, comments recently made by key Federal Reserve officials have reignited worries about the effects the monetary tightening instituted by the American central bank could have on the markets.

San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly and Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard indicated during a Tuesday webinar that their organisation would move to aggressively hike interest rates and reduce its balance sheet as soon as next month. The Federal Reserve has had to walk a thin line in recent months between attempting to rein in inflation and keeping the economy from sliding into recession. Following yesterday’s comments by Daly and Brainard, market watchers may have come to the conclusion that the Fed has placed itself firmly on the hawkish side of the monetary policy map.

Investors need to await the release of the FOMC’s last meeting’s minutes later today to fully ascertain how concrete these assumptions might be, but traders in Asia, according to many analysts, already voted with their wallets today, pushing the aforementioned Indices down.

Ukraine and COVID-19 Spook Investors

Other possible factors that could have influenced Asian traders to become more risk-averse today include the spread of COVID-19 in China and recent developments in Western policy toward the Russian Federation.

Concerns about the economic fallout from the military conflict between Russia and Ukraine have influenced market sentiments since the beginning of hostilities, especially relating to the potential cutoff of Oil (CL) and Natural Gas (NG) supplies sourced in Russian territory. As more and more Western nations expel Russian diplomats, and diplomatic pressure on the Russian government increases, the spectre of even wider-ranging sanctions is again rearing its head, and influencing market behaviour as far away as East Asia.

In addition, the major Chinese commercial centre of Shanghai is still struggling to deal with record coronavirus infections, and the Communist Party has extended the lockdown put into place in the millions-strong city. Asian traders may be concerned about the possibility that yet another wave of lockdowns could be a drag on the continent’s growth prospects.

In conclusion, today’s trading on major Asian markets may have some market watchers apprehensive about the near-term trajectory of key global Indices. However, if there’s one conclusion to be drawn from the ups and downs of recent times, it is that nearly nothing is set in stone when it comes to the economy.

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