• MTS Futures News_PM_20210316

    16 Mar 2021 | SET News


· Asian stocks follow Wall Street higher ahead of Fed meeting

Asia-Pacific markets mostly edged higher Tuesday following a relatively subdued start to the global trading week as investors look ahead to the Fed meeting stateside.

Australian shares rose as the benchmark ASX 200 gained 0.8% to 6,827.10, after finishing near flat in the previous session. Most sectors traded up except for the energy and materials subindexes, which closed down 0.17% and 0.65%, respectively.

Oil stocks and major miners closed mixed but the so-called Big Four banks advanced: Shares of Commonwealth Bank climbed 0.9% while ANZ rose 0.56%, Westpac added 0.61% and National Australia Bank advanced 0.42%.


The Nikkei 225 in Japan advanced 0.52% to 29,921.09 while the Topix index gained 0.65% to 1,981.50. In South Korea, the Kospi added 0.7% to 3,067.17 while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index rose 0.6% in late-afternoon trade.


Chinese mainland shares reversed earlier losses to close higher: The Shanghai composite added 0.78% to 3,446.73 and the Shenzhen component advanced 0.91% to 13,642.95.

That follows an overnight session on Wall Street where the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 inched higher to closed at record highs amid optimism over the economic reopening.

Treasury yields slipped further on Tuesday, as the market looked ahead to government debt auctions and the Fed’s two-day policy meeting, which will conclude on Wednesday


· Fed meeting

The Federal Open Market Committee is due to meet on March 16 and 17.

That is “undoubtedly another factor keeping investors a little bit cautious at the start of the new week,” Rodrigo Catril, senior foreign-exchange strategist at the National Australia Bank, said in a Tuesday morning note.

“There is a lot of focus on whether the new forecasts and dots plot will vindicate the current lift in Fed hike expectations,” he said.

Every quarter, members of the FOMC forecast where interest rates will go in the short, medium and long term. These projections are represented visually in charts and are called a dot plot.

A surge in interest rates and a rebounding U.S. economy has put the central bank’s easy policies in the spotlight and market watchers have questioned when the Fed may consider unwinding those policies.


 


· The Bank of England is due to meet on Thursday and the Bank of Japan will also begin its two-day policy meeting that day.

· Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank of Australia released the minutes of its March monetary policy meeting, and said that members concluded “very significant monetary support would be required for some time, as it would be some years before the Bank’s goals for inflation and unemployment were achieved.”Longer-term U.S..


· European markets climb on recovery hopes; Fed in focus; VW up 4.5%



European stocks advanced Tuesday morning as market attention focuses on the global economic recovery and the latest meeting of the U.S. Federal Reserve.

The pan-European Stoxx 600 added 0.5% at the start of trading, with autos climbing 1.9% to lead gains while oil and gas stocks dropped 0.4%.

Market focus is on the Federal Reserve which kicks off its two-day meeting on Tuesday, followed by a statement and briefing from Chairman Jerome Powell on Wednesday.

A surge in interest rates and a rebounding U.S. economy has put the central bank’s easy policies in the spotlight and market watchers have questioned when the Fed may consider unwinding those policies


Reference: CNBC, Reuters

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