The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was little changed after two days of gains that took the gauge to an all-time high. The moves came after Wall Street benchmarks retreated on Tuesday.
Treasury futures held their gains early Wednesday after 10-year bond yields dropped to the lowest in about a month in the US session. There will be no cash trading in Treasuries during the Asian day as Japan is closed for a holiday. Gold, which typically benefits when rates are cut, edged up as money markets see slightly higher odds of three Fed cuts this year — with two already fully priced in.
Unexpectedly weak December retail sales hinted at softer consumer support for the US economy as the year ended. The data set the stage for a pivotal week, with traders bracing for the US jobs report on Wednesday and inflation figures on Friday for clues on the path for rates, even as equities waver amid concerns over technology firms’ hefty spending on artificial intelligence.
The jobs report “will be key,” said Bret Kenwell at eToro. “A weak print could push sentiment further toward risk-off if growth worries start to build, but a solid print may ease some of those concerns.”
Economists predict a 65,000 rise in January payrolls. Such an outcome would be the best in four months. The unemployment rate is seen holding at 4.4%. There will be an annual revision to the jobs count — which is expected to reveal a markdown in the year through March 2025.On Tuesday, the S&P 500 slipped 0.3% amid weakness in several tech names, though the gauge remained near the record reached last month. The dollar wavered, while the yen led gains among Group-of-10 currencies versus the greenback. Bitcoin dropped below $70,000. Meanwhile, Fed Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack said rates could be on an extended hold while officials evaluate incoming economic data. Her Dallas counterpart Lorie Logan said she’s hopeful inflation will continue to come down, though it would take “material” weakness in the labor market for her to support more rate cuts.
“We expect a further two rate cuts of 25 basis points from the Federal Reserve this year,” said Mark Haefele at UBS Global Wealth Management. “Solid economic growth, in part supported by productivity gains, is supporting corporate earnings.”
Last week’s steep drop in software stocks on concern about competition from artificial intelligence was likely overdone and the US economy remains poised for strong growth this year, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s chief executive officer.
“I think the narrative over the last week has been a little bit too broad,” David Solomon said Tuesday at a UBS Group AG conference in Key Biscayne, Florida. “There’ll be winners and losers — plenty of companies will pivot and do just fine.”




















