Asian Stocks Poised to Fall as China Woes Worsen: Markets Wrap

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(Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks are poised to fall early Monday as concerns over the health of the Chinese economy grow. US equity futures were steady.

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Contracts in Australia, Hong Kong and mainland China point to an early loss at the Monday open, while moves in Asia may be exacerbated by thin liquidity with Japanese markets closed for a holiday. The S&P 500 closed 0.2% lower on Friday following a quarterly options expiry.

Data late Friday showed Chinese governments have cut spending while the youth jobless rate climbed to its highest level this year as the nation’s banks refrain from cutting lending rates. Adding to the weak sentiment, the US is said to be planning rules that would ban Chinese hardware and software for connected vehicles as soon as Monday.

“Things in China are going from bad to worse,” said Tony Sycamore, an analyst at IG in Sydney. “With Japanese stock markets closed for a public holiday, the PBOC disappointing the market on Friday, and US yields ratcheting higher, we are likely to see a more downbeat tone across Asian equity markets today.”

Broadly, markets are readying for the final quarter after the Federal Reserve began its long awaited rate cut cycle last week, lifting everything from Indonesian bonds to gold. Data this week including the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation should confirm whether the rally will extend, with a deterioration likely lifting odds of a further 50 basis point cut.

After wavering between gains and losses in the final minutes of Friday trading, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 both closed lower with the broader benchmark fresh off its 39th record high of 2024. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a new record. More than 20 billion shares changed hands on US exchanges, the busiest session since January 2021.

Intel Corp. was among the session’s advancers after reports of a bid by Qualcomm Inc. Shares may extend gains in US trading after Apollo Global Management Inc. was reported to offer to make an equity-like investment of as much as $5 billion in the chipmaker.

Gold closed above $2,600 an ounce on Friday, extending gains after an Israeli strike on a Beirut suburb. The precious metal and oil were steady in early trading as Hezbollah launched retaliatory attacks toward vast areas of Israel’s north after the pager and other electronic device explosions last week that killed at least 39 people in Lebanon.