Markets struggle as rally fades, China growth misses forecasts
Asian markets struggled Monday (17 July) to build on last week's rally, with new data showing China's economy grew less than expected in the second quarter as its post-Covid recovery runs out of steam.
Equities surged last week as news that US inflation slowed more than forecast fanned hopes that the Federal Reserve would soon end its campaign of interest rate hikes.
The advance was also bolstered by pledges from Beijing to introduce stimulus measures for the struggling economy.
However, the scale of the work facing Chinese officials was laid bare Monday, with data showing gross domestic product expanded 6.3% on-year in April-June, much less than forecast in an AFP survey.
Growth was also sharply down on a quarter-on-quarter basis, which is seen as a better guide to the state of the economy owing to the low base of comparison with last year's Covid-depressed performance.
The country's National Bureau of Statistics also said youth unemployment jumped to a record 21.3% in June, adding to months of data highlighting weakness in the world's number-two economy.
The readings will further stoke calls for authorities to announce more measures to fire growth, having cut interest rates last month.
But while officials have pledged to do more, there has been little concrete out of Beijing so far.
"Asia investors have been greeted by a dismal Chinese data dump to start the week," said SPI Asset Management's Stephen Innes.
"But... the data will be viewed through the lens of how it will influence the policy decisions made at the upcoming Politburo meeting in late July. With that in mind, expectations should grow that Beijing will do major fiscal soon."
In early trade, Shanghai fell more than one percent, and there were also losses in Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Manila and Wellington. Taipei and Jakarta edged up.
Hong Kong was closed because of a typhoon, while Tokyo was shut for a holiday.
The tepid performance Monday came as investors weighed the outlook for US interest rates after last week's consumer and wholesale price indexes came in below forecasts.
The readings were seen as giving the Federal Reserve room to wind down its monetary tightening drive, which has lasted more than a year.
While it is expected to hike again this month, there is debate over whether it will then call it a day or announce one more before the end of the year.
"We think it is premature to declare victory on inflation and expect volatility to remain elevated over the near term," JPMorgan Chase & Co. strategists led by Phoebe White said.
Still, bets that the Fed is close to the end of its cycle have weighed on the dollar in recent weeks, with other central banks still lifting costs owing to stubbornly sticky inflation prints.
The euro last week touched $1.1248, the highest level since February 2022, while the yen and sterling have also pushed to multi-month highs.
Also in focus is the start of the corporate earnings season, which got into full swing Friday with forecast-topping results and outlooks from banking titans Citigroup, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo.
Finance ministers and central bank bosses from the Group of 20 begin a two-day meeting in India on Monday, where they will discuss ways to bolster the stuttering global economy.