Investors also await headline U.S. jobs data due on Thursday, albeit the report may do little more than confirm earlier private market surveys showing the labour market had slowed.
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Expectations for a U.S. interest rate cut in December have fallen to less than 50% following policymakers sounding hesitant. That has started to put pressure on stocks, especially in the frothy and rates-sensitive technology sector.
CHINA-JAPAN TENSION SINKS ASIA STOCKS
Ten-year U.S. Treasury yields were steady at 4.1347% and Germany’s 10-year , the benchmark for the euro zone, likewise held firm at 2.715% after touching its joint-highest since October 7 at 2.718%.
NVIDIA EARNINGS, US JOBS SLOWDOWN IN FOCUS
The headline U.S. data release this week will be Thursday’s delayed September jobs report.
The figures may be too stale to be of much use, since private surveys have already flagged a labour market slowdown.
“If all it does is confirm that, it’s not going to change the tune of the more hawkish Fed officials. They are more worried about inflation upside risks, so CPI data for them will be critical,” said ANZ’s head of research in Asia, Khoon Goh.
On Friday, rate cut expectations cooled when Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid and Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan cast doubt on the need to cut next month.
Nvidia shares have soared about 1,000% since the launch of ChatGPT in November 2022. This includes a year-to-date gain of more than 40% that made Nvidia the first company to surpass $5 trillion in market value last month.
In foreign exchange, the U.S. dollar was up slightly, holding the euro just below $1.16 and creeping higher on other majors.
Gold edged down to $4,072 an ounce, albeit the precious metal has soared 55% this year from a price of $2,624 an ounce on January 1 as safe-haven demand, geopolitical tensions and expectations of lower rates burnished its appeal.
Brent crude futures slipped 0.64% to $63.98 as loading resumed at a Russian hub hit previously by a Ukrainian attack.
Bitcoin , which has lately behaved as a barometer of the mood on technology stocks, is nursing its largest weekly fall since March, having lost more than 10% last week. It traded up 2% on Monday at $95,517.
Reporting by Lawrence White in London and Tom Westbrook in Singapore; Editing by Jamie Freed and Christopher Cushing
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