(Bloomberg) -- Asian equities were set to drop Thursday after a weak Treasury auction dealt a fresh blow to sentiment on Wall Street.
Futures contracts for Japan, Australia and Hong Kong fell, while a gauge of US-listed Chinese shares slipped 1.5%. Both the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 declined, unwinding early gains that were initially helped along by dovish signals from the Bank of Japan. Contracts for US equities also fell.
The central bank on Wednesday indicated policymakers wouldn’t raise interest rates during bouts of market volatility, leading to further weakness in the yen. The Japanese currency was marginally stronger Thursday after falling 1.6% against the dollar Wednesday.
Australian and New Zealand bonds fell in early trading following a Wednesday sell-off in Treasuries that partly reflected lackluster demand for a 10-year auction. The 10-year yield rose five basis points to 3.94%. Treasuries also came under pressure as 17 blue-chip companies offered $31.8 billion of debt, the highest amount of US investment-grade issuance this year.
The auction result is “consistent with our view that we’re due for a continued correction higher in yield in the near-term,” said Zachary Griffiths, head of US investment grade and macro strategy at CreditSights. “The repricing following what was really just a moderately weak payrolls report seems way overdone.”
The yen’s sharp decline on Wednesday rippled across currency markets. The Mexican peso was one beneficiary, rising 1.5% against the dollar. The Indonesian rupiah and Brazilian real also gained against the dollar Wednesday.
The unwinding of the carry trade triggered by the BOJ’s hawkish stance last week which supported the yen has since eased, according to Quincy Krosby at LPL Financial.
“Markets globally have felt a sigh of relief as the velocity of the unwinding eases, but the yen’s relationship to the dollar is also a key component of the carry trade calculus,” she noted. “A softer dollar, driven by the markets perception that the Fed will soon initiate an easing cycle, should help support a stronger yen — a negative for the trade.”
US Markets
Following a gain of almost 2% earlier in the session, the S&P 500 closed 0.8% lower. Nvidia Corp. led losses in megacaps. Super Micro Computer Inc. tumbled 20% on disappointing earnings. In late trading, Warner Bros. Discovery Inc., the parent of CNN and TNT, plunged after posting a charge of $9.1 billion as it wrote down the value of its traditional TV networks.
Earlier gains in stocks were fueled by Japan’s reassurance on the heels of massive swings in the country’s stock prices over the past week. The moves were compounded by the view the Fed would cut rates more aggressively, prompting traders to rapidly unwind once-popular yen-funded carry trades — including crowded positions in US tech stocks.
Markets have been in a tailspin since last week’s economic data fueled worries that the Federal Reserve’s decision to hold rates at a two-decade high is risking a deeper economic slowdown.
JPMorgan economists now see a 35% chance that the US economy tips into a recession by the end of this year, up from 25% as of the start of last month.
“Stocks remain vulnerable,” said Fawad Razaqzada at City Index and Forex.com. “More evidence of a bottom is needed to excite the bulls again. Overall, sentiment remained cagey. Not many people were confident to buy this latest dip, especially with US CPI looming next week.”
Oil climbed as investors remained on edge over the possibility of a retaliatory strike from Iran on Israel. Gold was little changed early Thursday after five sessions of declines.
Key events this week:
Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
Currencies
Cryptocurrencies
Bonds
Commodities
This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.