Morning Bid: Monitoring dollar, DeepSeek and China’s PMIs

JMEV electric vehicle production line in Nanchang
Employees work on an electric vehicle (EV) production line during an organised media tour to a factory under Jiangling Group Electric Vehicle (JMEV), in Nanchang, Jiangxi province, China May 22, 2024. REUTERS/Kevin Krolicki/File Photo

A look at the day ahead in Asian markets. 

A big week for world markets kicks off in Asia on Monday with investors still navigating the blizzard of headlines around U.S. President Donald Trump’s likely economic agenda, while trying to gauge whether the “U.S. exceptionalism” narrative may be losing its luster.

The dollar fell 1.8% last week, its worst week since November 2023. If the greenback is consolidating, it shouldn’t really be a surprise – it hit a two-year high earlier this month and hedge fund net ‘long’ position was the biggest in nine years.

The dollar and U.S. stocks have been closely correlated, lifted by the huge wave of global capital inflows as investors bet heavily on the American AI, tech, growth and returns boom.

But if the dollar’s slide is a sign that the “U.S. exceptionalism” flame is starting to flicker, is Wall Street primed for a cooling off period too?

The S&P 500 hit a new high last week and the Nasdaq came close. Index levels are historically high, valuations are stretched, and big event risk looms this week in the shape of the Fed’s policy meeting and ‘Big Tech’ earnings.

Scrutiny on U.S. tech is intensifying as ripples from a Chinese AI startup called DeepSeek spread. DeepSeek recently launched a free, open-source AI model it claims is at least the equal of more established models like ChatGPT on many levels, but built at a fraction of the cost.

It’s early days but if this shines a critical light on the huge sums being spent on AI by U.S. tech firms, Wall Street could wobble.

The Asian calendar on Monday is dominated by China’s ‘official’ manufacturing and service sector purchasing managers index reports for January.

A Reuters poll suggests the manufacturing PMI will be unchanged from the previous month at 50.1. On the one hand, that would represent the fourth straight month of expansion in the sector. It would also indicate almost no growth at all for the second month in a row.

Data on Friday showed Chinese state-owned firms’ profits last year virtually evaporated, rising only 0.4% on the previous year. Wider industrial sector profits figures are due this week, perhaps as early as Monday, and are expected to confirm that 2024 was the worst year in decades.

Investors will give their second day verdict on Friday’s Bank of Japan’s rate hike. The initial take seemed to be that it was a ‘hawkish hike’, but Japanese money markets are still pricing in only another 25 basis points of tightening this year, unchanged from pre-Friday levels. This suggests BOJ guidance was actually pretty neutral, and Japanese stock futures are pointing to a strong rise on Monday.

Meanwhile, South Korean markets will be sensitive to the news that prosecutors on Sunday indicted impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol on charges of leading an insurrection with his short-lived imposition of martial law on Dec. 3.

Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Friday:

  • China ‘official’ PMIs (January)
  • Japan leading indicator (November)
  • Germany Ifo index (January)
Source: Reuters/Reporting by Jamie McGeever; Editing by Diane Craft
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