Asian Stocks Slammed by Hawkish Fed, China Rally Pauses

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Investing.com– Asian stock markets tumbled on Thursday after the Federal Reserve espoused a more hawkish outlook than expected, with Chinese equities cutting short a two-day rally amid uncertainty over the country’s plans to scale back COVID lockdowns.

China’s bluechip Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 index fell 1%, while the Shanghai Composite index shed 0.4%. Both indexes rallied nearly 3% each this week on speculation that China plans to eventually phase out its strict zero-COVID policy by next year. But Chinese authorities offered no official comment on the matter.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was the worst performer for the day, tumbling 3% as technology stocks were sold off on the Federal Reserve rate hike. Hong Kong’s Monetary Authority also hiked interest rates on Thursday to keep pace with the Fed, a move that is negative for local stocks.

Additionally, a private survey showed that China’s services sector shrank more than expected in October, indicating that COVID-related disruptions continued to impact the world’s second-largest economy. The weak reading, coupled with uncertainty over the zero-COVID policy, soured sentiment toward Chinese markets.

Broader Asian stocks also sank. India’s Nifty 50 index fell 0.2%, while the Taiwan Weighted index shed 0.9%. Focus in India is also on the start of an off-cycle central bank meeting on Thursday, where the bank is expected to offer more cues on the path of monetary policy amid surging inflation.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index fell 1.8%, while Malaysia’s benchmark index led losses across Southeast Asia with a 1.3% drop.

The Fed hiked rates by an as-expected 75 basis points. Fed Chair Jerome Powell dismissed speculation over a potential pause on interest rate hikes, and warned that U.S. rates are likely to peak at much higher levels than initially expected.

His comments triggered a broad sell-off in risk-driven markets, with U.S. stocks tumbling in overnight trade.

But Powell also raised the prospect of smaller rate hikes moving forward, which saw an increasing number of traders pricing in a 50 bps hike in December.

Rising interest rates weighed heavily on Asian markets this year by tightening liquidity conditions and making low-risk debt appear more attractive. This trend is expected to continue in the near-term, with stubbornly high inflation across most of the globe furthering the need for higher interest rates.

The Bank of England is also set to hike interest rates later in the day.