Asia Shares Slip as U.S. Occupations Shocker Hammers Bonds

Asia Shares Slip as U.S. Occupations Shocker Hammers Bonds

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Asian share markets mostly eased on Monday after stunningly robust U.S. jobs data soothed concerns about the global economy but also added to the risk of an aggressive tightening by the Federal Reserve.

Geopolitics also remained a worry as the White House warned Russia could invade Ukraine any day, and French President Emmanuel Macron prepared for a trip to Moscow.

The cautious mood saw MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dipped 0.1% in early trade. Japan's Nikkei fell 0.9% and South Korea 0.8%.

Chinese markets returned from the Lunar New Year break with a bounce, with the blue-chip CSI300 and Shanghai Composite both up about 2% in morning trade, catching up with last week's gains in world equities. The Hang Seng, who returned from the break on Friday, was flat.

S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures both eased slightly after last week's market turmoil saw Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ: AMZN) gain almost $200 billion while Facebook-owner Meta Platforms Inc lost just as much.

BofA analyst Savita Subramanian noted company guidance for 2022 had weakened significantly, with most stocks falling following earnings reports.

"Commentaries suggested worsening labor shortages and supply chain issues, with a bigger headwind expected in Q1 than in Q4," Subramanian said in a note. With wages being the most significant cost component for companies, margin pressure was set to continue.

The January payrolls report showed annual growth in average hourly earnings climbed to 5.7%, from 4.9%, while payrolls for prior months were revised up by 709,000 to change the trend in hiring radically.

"The report not only indicated that payrolls were way more than anyone could have imagined but there was exceptional strength in earnings which has to add growing concern among Fed officials about upward pressure on inflation," said Kevin Cummins (NYSE: CMI), chief U.S. economist at NatWest Markets.

January's consumer price figures are due on Thursday and could well show core inflation accelerating to the fastest pace since 1982 at 5.9%.

As a result, markets moved to price in a one-in-three chance the Fed might hike by a total of 50 basis points in March and the real prospect of rates reaching 1.5% by year-end.

That sent two-year yields up 15 basis points for the week, the most significant rise since late 2019, and they were last standing at 1.327%. [U.S./]

In currency markets, the euro continued to bask in the glow of a newly hawkish European Central Bank as calls brought forward the likely timing of a first-rate rise and sent bond yields sharply higher.

Klaas Knot, the Dutch Central Bank President and a member of the ECB's governing council, said he expects a hike in the fourth quarter of this year on Sunday.

The single currency was viewed at $1.1456, having shot up 2.7% last week in its best performance since early 2020. Technically, a break of resistance around $1.1482 would open the way to $1.1600 and higher.

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The dollar fared better on the Japanese yen as the market still sees little chance the Bank of Japan will tighten this year. It was steady at 115.27 yen, while the euro was up at 132.06 yen, having climbed 2.7% last week.

The wild swing in the euro left the U.S. dollar index down at 95.436, after shedding 1.8% last week.

Gold was a shade firmer at $1,808 an ounce but had been struggling in the face of higher bond yields.

Oil prices were up near seven-year highs amid concerns about supply given by frigid U.S. weather and ongoing political turmoil among significant world producers. [O/R]

Brent added another 32 cents to $92.97 a barrel, while U.S. crude rose 42 cents to $91.89.

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