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Abstract:Asia Pacific stock markets broadly failed to hang on to their gains despite Wall Streets punchy Tuesday. Weak Australian inflation boosted the ASX but hit AUD hard
Asian Stocks Talking Points:
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Most mainboards surrendered initial gains
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Australia‘s didn’t as weak inflation put focus on yet-lower interest rates
The US Dollar remained well underpinned
Find out what retail foreign exchange investors make of your favorite currencys chances right now at the DailyFX Sentiment Page
Australias ASX 200 was the standout gainer Wednesday in what was elsewhere a patchy day for Asia Pacific stocks. Most got an initial tailwind from a strong Wall Street Tuesday, rooted in record closing highs for the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 in the face of crowd-pleasing corporate earnings,
Most regional mainboards retraced their gains as the session wore on but the ASX was propped up by much weaker than expected Australian inflation readings which raised hopes that record-low Australian interest rates could yet go lower still.
The ASX added 0.9%, but the Nikkei 225 was off by 0.5% as its close loomed, with Shanghai down 0.9%. Trade was back to the forefront thanks to reports that US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Secretary of the Treasury Stephen Mnuchin will be heading back to Beijing for more talks on April 30.
Australian stock investors may have liked those feeble Consumer Price Index data, but Australian Dollar investors were much less keen. The prospect, perhaps, of lower rates coming soon, sent AUD/USD down to six-week lows.
AUD/USD has slipped back into the pervasive downtrend channel which marked most of 2018s trade.
The lows of early March are coming back into play, with January‘s significant lows awaiting should they give way. The US Dollar meanwhile powered up to 22-month peaks against a basket of its major traded rivals, boosted by equities’ vigor and more strong economic data this time in the form of new-home sales.
Crude oil prices dipped back from this weeks highs even as investors continued to mull the likely effects of intensifying US sanctions against major producer Iran. Gold prices headed lower too as haven assets were broadly shunned.
Still to come Wednesday is Germany‘s Ifo business sentiment survey, UK public finance data and the Bank of Canada’s April monetary policy call. Canadian base rates are expected to stay put at 1.75%. From the US will come official crude oil inventory levels from the Department of Energy.
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--- Written by David Cottle, DailyFX Research
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The start of November has been a dwindling moment for the general major currency market. As essential economic updates flood the surface of the entire foreign exchange market, in which most of the currency pairs especially the major pairs were greatly affected by the impact of the economic releases. However, the US dollar was discovered to have held the main currency exchange performance metrics as the central economic updates from the US region tend to have determined the significant changes that have occurred in the major currency market so far.
The dollar hovered below recent highs on Tuesday as traders waited for the Reserve Bank of Australia to lead a handful of central bank meetings set to define the rates outlook this week.
US DOLLAR, JAPAN ELECTION, USD/JPY, CHINA PMI, AUD/USD - TALKING POINTS