Hong Kong — Asian shares traded cautiously on Tuesday, with investors weighing China’s measures to cushion an economic slowdown and the prospect of aggressive Federal Reserve monetary policy tightening.
Early in the Asian trading day, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.5%, while US stock futures, the S&P 500 e-minis, were up 0.2%. The People’s Bank of China said on Friday it would cut the reserve requirement for all banks by 25 basis points, releasing about 530-billion yuan in long-term liquidity to cushion a slowdown.
Analysts said the question was whether authorities would make adjustments to the tough anti-Covid-19 measures. A cut to global growth expectations from the World Bank, paired with March weakness in China’s latest economic numbers injected some pessimism into US markets, which opened on Monday after a holiday-shortened previous week.
The benchmark 10-year treasury yield was last at 2.845%, after previously hitting 2.884% earlier on Monday, the highest since December 2018, as investors adjusted for the Federal Reserve to raise rates by 50 basis points at its May and June meetings to contain rapid inflation.