Asian stocks under pressure after US jobs blowout: MarketRep

(Bloomberg) — Asian stocks were headed for early declines on Monday after strong U.S. jobs data led traders to reconsider the path forward for a Federal Reserve interest rate cut.

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Equity futures for Australia and Hong Kong fell, indicating further pressure on a gauge of the region’s shares that have fallen over the past three sessions. The Japanese market is closed on Monday for a holiday. U.S. stocks and Treasuries fell after Friday’s report, with the S&P 500 down 1.5% and the Nasdaq 100 down 1.6%. The 10-year yield rose seven basis points to close at 4.76%, a level not seen since 2023.

Australian and New Zealand bond yields also climbed early Monday. The dollar traded within narrow ranges after strengthening against most major currencies on Friday, pushing an index of greenback strength to a two-year high. The yen was an outlier, paring a recent decline against the dollar, after Bank of Japan officials indicated they might consider raising their inflation outlook at a policy meeting later in January.

The selloff in stocks and renewed enthusiasm for the dollar reflected the caution that has marked the early weeks of the year as traders remain uncertain about Federal Reserve cuts and the pace of inflation.

Elsewhere, options traders are bracing for the pound to fall as much as 8% as the financial crisis that prompted a painful sell-off weighed on the currency in UK markets last week.

In Asia, data to be released on Monday includes December trade data for China and inflation for India. Separate data on China’s December money supply could also be released anytime until January 15.

Economic data for China will provide investors with further evidence of the challenges facing the world’s second-largest economy. Chinese stocks are facing their worst start to a year since 2016 after falling more than 5% in the first seven trading sessions of 2025.

Strong jobs

With the Consumer Price Index report out on Wednesday, investors will turn their attention to signs of US inflation in data to be released this week. They will also watch the New York Fed’s one-year inflation expectations on Monday, producer prices on Tuesday and jobless claims on Thursday.

The data will provide further clarity on the US economy after Friday’s blow-out nonfarm payrolls data. US employment rose by the most in nine months in December and the unemployment rate fell sharply, capping another year of resilience in the labor market. The data supported the view that US rates could be on hold for the foreseeable future, a possibility suggested by a handful of Fed officials last week.

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