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    Markets mixed as traders struggle to keep up with Wall Street rally

    HONG KONG (AFP) – Asian markets were mixed yesterday as investors struggled to keep up with Wall Street, though forecast-beating United States (US) inflation data did little to dent expectations that the Federal Reserve will begin cutting interest rates this year.

    While February’s consumer price index reading was not ideal – having come in above estimates in January – analysts said it showed price rises were levelling out and that the start of the year often saw a blip.

    Attention now turns to the central bank’s policy meeting next week, which will also see the release of policymakers’ outlook for rates for the rest of the year.

    Traders are pricing in three reductions before the end of 2024, and a similar forecast by the Fed could line up the first in June, Bloomberg News said.

    All three main indexes in New York jumped close to all-time highs and Asia started yesterday strongly but some markets petered out as the day wore on.

    Hong Kong dipped after a three-day rally, while Tokyo was weighed by talk that the Bank of Japan could next week begin shifting away from its ultra-loose monetary policy.

    A pedestrian passes by a Hong Kong Stock Exchange electronic screen. PHOTO: AP

    Expectations for tightening picked up on news that Toyota had agreed to union demands for a full hike in salary and bonuses for the fourth year in a row.

    Shanghai, Mumbai and Wellington also dipped.

    Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Manila, Bangkok and Jakarta rose.

    London rose at the open as data showed the United Kingdom (UK) economy grew slightly in January, having contracted the month before. Frankfurt soared to a record high above 18,000 points and Paris was also higher.

    IG Markets analyst Hebe Chen said the latest figures “will undoubtedly prompt the Fed to choose their language with extra caution” next week.

    SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes added that traders assumed the Fed was happy for inflation to sit above its two percent target for now and were ready to cut several times by the end of the year.

    “Investors feel emboldened to pursue high-risk opportunities without fear of facing higher interest rates,” he said in a commentary.

    “The Fed’s apparent lack of concern about the risk of a positive wealth effect reigniting demand-side inflation further supports this sentiment.”

    Bitcoin was sitting around USD72,800, having earlier hit another record of USD73,137, helped by rate-cut optimism and news this week that Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority watchdog will join US regulators in allowing the creation of crypto-related securities.

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