Asian stocks rise, but rate, inflation angst limits gains By biedexmarkets.com

biedexmarkets.com– Most Asian stocks advanced on Tuesday as they recouped some losses from last week, although anticipation of key inflation readings and more cues on U.S. interest rates kept gains in check. 

A flat overnight close on Wall Street also provided middling cues to Asian markets, as investors remained wary of making big bets ahead of more cues on interest rates. U.S. stock index futures moved little in Asian trade. 

Focus was largely on U.S. data for more cues on interest rates, especially as a blowout report saw traders begin pricing out expectations for a June rate cut. 

Most Asian stocks were nursing steep losses from last week, as growing fears of higher-for-longer U.S. rates sparked widespread selling in risk-driven assets.

Taiwan stocks boosted by TSMC on $6.6 bln US subsidy

The was by far the best performer in Asia on Tuesday, rising over 1% on strong gains in chipmaker TSMC (TW:) (NYSE:), the biggest stock on the index.

TSMC surged nearly 4% to a record high after the world’s biggest contract chipmaker won a $6.6 billion subsidy from the U.S. government for an advanced chipmaking plant in Arizona. The chipmaker also increased its investment in the plant by $25 billion to $65 billion.

Chinese stocks lag, but Hong Kong boosted by support promises

China’s and indexes lagged their regional peers for a second straight session, as weak risk appetite kept investors largely cautious towards the country. 

But Hong Kong’s index outperformed, rising 0.7% after the city’s leader John Lee said that authorities were considering more measures to boost local stock markets. But Lee did not provide any specific details on what measures this would entail. 

His comments came after a sustained underperformance in Hong Kong stocks over the past four years, as weakness in China spilled over.

More Chinese economic cues are on tap this week, with and data due on Thursday and Friday, respectively. 

Japan’s Nikkei 225 extends recovery, but remains below 40,000 

Japanese stocks extended a recent rebound on Tuesday, with the index rising 0.6%, while the broader added 0.3%.

But the Nikkei still remained below 40,000 points, after it suffered bruising losses last week on a mix of profit-taking and pressure from a stronger .

The yen softened this week, creeping back towards lows hit in 1990 as traders grew bolder that the Japanese government will not act on its warnings of intervening in currency markets. 

Broader Asian stocks either rose marginally, or tread water. Australia’s index add 0.4% even as data showed consumer sentiment worsened in April.

South Korea’s fell 0.3%, with a Bank of Korea on tap later this week. 

Futures for India’s index pointed to a flat open, with the index open to some profit-taking after closing at a record high on Monday.

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