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The refurbished Hong Kong Stock Exchange in Hong Kong, China, on June 24 2022. Picture: Bertha Wang/Bloomberg
The refurbished Hong Kong Stock Exchange in Hong Kong, China, on June 24 2022. Picture: Bertha Wang/Bloomberg

Sydney — Asian shares inched higher on Monday after a much-needed bounce on Wall Street, but nerves are stretched before a near-certain interest rate hike in Europe and another round of corporate earnings reports.

It is shaping up to be a fraught week for Europe as it waits anxiously to see if Russia resumes the flow of gas through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline on July 21, while Italy teeters on the brink of political turmoil should Prime Minister Mario Draghi go ahead and resign.

“If gas flows do not resume meaningfully, European gas prices will surge, prompting Germany and others to enact gas and power rationing with a deep recession all but guaranteed if this were to occur,” said Taylor Nugent, an economist at NAB.

“Our base case is that gas flows resume.”

The uncertainty will haunt the European Central Bank as it holds a policy meeting at which it is likely to kick off a tightening cycle with a rise of 25 basis points.

Markets are also hanging on details of an antifragmentation tool intended to ease pressure on borrowing costs for the union's most indebted members.

Investors found some relief in Friday's rally on Wall Street, and MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 0.7%, having shed 3.5% last week.

Japan's nikkei was closed for a holiday, but futures traded at 27,040 compared with a cash close of 26,788, while South Korea gained 1.4%.

Chinese blue chips added 0.4%, though Shanghai announced more districtwide coronavirus testing.

Corporate earnings

S&P 500 futures edged up 0.2%, while Nasdaq futures firmed 0.4%. Euro Stoxx 50 futures rose 0.1% and FTSE futures were flat.

A who's who of corporates report earnings will be on show this week including Goldman Sachs Group, Bank of America, International Business Corp, Netflix, Tesla and Twitter.

Of the 35 companies in the S&P 500 having reported, 80% have beaten Street expectations, according to Refinitiv. Analysts now expect aggregate year-on-year second-quarter profit growth of 5.6%, down from 6.8% at the beginning of the quarter.

Investors have also been encouraged that the Federal Reserve is likely to hike by “only” 75 basis points next week, partly thanks to an easing in consumer fears of inflation.

“This softening of inflation expectations is one reason we expect the FOMC will not accelerate the near-term hiking pace and will deliver a 75bp hike at the July FOMC meeting,” said analysts at Goldman Sachs in a note.

It is a lighter week for US data, though the first round of flash surveys on global manufacturing will provide a timely reading on how industries are faring this month.

The Bank of Japan holds its policy meeting amid concerns the breakneck drop in the yen is adding to the cost of imported commodities and widening the country's trade deficit.

Softer dollar

Yet markets assume the central bank will stick with it ultraeasy policies, making it an outlier among the majors not to be raising rates.

The dollar was a shade softer at ¥138.15, having climbed 1.8% last week to a 24-year peak of ¥139.38. Against a basket of currencies, it was holding at ¥107.730 , off last week's top of ¥109.290.

The euro was a little firmer at $1.0107, after bouncing from a two-decade trough of $0.9952 last week.

“The Russia-Europe natural gas pipeline that is now closed for maintenance is scheduled to be turned back on Thursday,” noted CBA economist Joseph Capurso. “However, if the gas flow does not resume EUR/USD could drop by at least 2%.”

Rising interest rates and a firm dollar have been a major drag for non-yielding gold which was stuck at $1,713 an ounce after shedding 2% last week.

Oil prices drifted lower as President Joe Biden continued his trip to the Middle East hoping to get agreement on an increase in output.

Saudi Arabia's foreign minister said a US-Arab summit on Saturday did not discuss oil and that Opec+ would continue to assess market conditions and do what is necessary.

Brent dipped 13c to $101.03, while US crude eased 51c to $97.08 per barrel.

Reuters

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