Currency traders watch monitors near a screen showing the Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI), top left, and the foreign exchange rate between US dollar and South Korean won, top center, at the foreign exchange dealing room of the KEB Hana Bank headquarters in Seoul, South Korea on May 22. (AP)
TOKYO, May 22, (AP): Asian shares fell Thursday after Wall Street slumped under pressure from the Treasury bond market and worries about surging US debt. U.S. futures were little changed, while Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 shed 1.0% in afternoon trading to 36,944.55. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 0.9% to 23,615.21, while the Shanghai Composite edged down 0.1% to 3,383.10.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.5% to 8,342.80. South Korea’s Kospi dropped 1.1% to 2,595.69. Rising yields for US Treasury bonds are a canary in the coal mine, Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said in a commentary. “The USstill has the biggest markets, the deepest liquidity, and the dollar’s inertia working in its favor.
But even inertia can’t outrun compound interest and structural deficits forever,” he wrote. The declining US dollar also weighed on regional markets, according to some analysts, because some Asian nations have significant holdings in dollars. A weak dollar also hurts Asian exporters, such as Japanese automakers and electronics companies, by reducing the value of their overseas earnings when they are converted into yen.
In currency trading, the US dollar fell to 143.27 Japanese yen from 143.68 yen. It had been trading at 150 yen levels a year ago. The euro cost $1.1335, up from $1.1330. Investors remain worried over President Donald Trump’s actions, including tariff policies that directly affect Asian companies and decisions on major legislation such as a funding bill now in Congress. “US equities slumped in a ‘Sell America’ move as things turned ugly on Trump’s ‘big, beautiful tax bill.’ ” said Tan Jing Yi, analyst at Mizuho Bank in Singapore.
On Wednesday, shares tumbled on Wall Street after the US government released the results for its latest auction of 20-year bonds. The government regularly sells such bonds, which is how it borrows money to pay its bills. In this auction, the US government had to pay a yield as high as 5.047% to attract enough buyers to lend it a total of $16 billion over 20 years.