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    Home > Trading > Asia markets slide as higher bond yields test tech sector
    Trading

    Asia markets slide as higher bond yields test tech sector

    Published by linker 5

    Posted on February 24, 2021

    3 min read

    Last updated: January 21, 2026

    An investor examines stock market data at a brokerage, reflecting on the recent recovery of European shares following strong German economic data. This image captures the cautious optimism in the investing community amidst inflation concerns.
    Investor analyzing stock market trends amid European shares recovery - Global Banking & Finance Review
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    By Tom Westbrook

    SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Falling tech stocks in China and Hong Kong pulled Asia’s markets sharply lower on Wednesday, as recent gains in U.S. Treasury yields put lofty equity valuations under pressure even as bond markets stabilised.

    MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 1.8% and has lost 3.2% for the week so far.

    Chinese blue chips fell 3% and the Hang Seng headed for its sharpest daily fall in nine months with a 3.4% drop that was further stoked by a rise in stock-trading stamp duty.

    Japan’s Nikkei fell 1% and mining shares dragged Australia’s ASX 200 down by 0.9%. S&P 500 futures dropped 0.6%, while EuroSTOXX 50 futures fell 0.2% and Britain’s FTSE futures fell 0.7%.

    On Tuesday U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Powell did not seem too peturbed by a selloff in Treasuries that has driven 10-year yields up by 40 basis points this year, telling Congress it was a statement on the market’s confidence in the pandemic recovery.

    But he cautioned that the economy remained “a long way” from employment and inflation goals and said that rates would stay low and bond buying would proceed apace until there was “substantial further progress”.

    “Powell has done enough to dampen the upswing in bond yields, but he has not derailed it,” said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy for Mizuho Bank in Singapore.

    “Yields are consolidating and not retreating – and that’s a result of this optimism that’s driving bond yields which he hasn’t pushed back against expressly.”

    Ten-year Treasury yields fell about two basis points after his remarks and more or less held there through the Asia session to trade at 1.340%. Wall Street indexes recouped losses but the tech heavy Nasdaq closed 0.5% lower.

    VALUATIONS TESTED

    Tech stocks are particularly sensitive to rising yields because their value rests heavily on earnings in the future, which are discounted more deeply when bond returns go up.

    February’s rise in yields reflects not just higher inflation expectations but better growth forecasts too, and ten-year U.S. real yields are on course for their sharpest monthly rise in more than four years. [US/]

    “In the next couple of days the movement of the Nasdaq 100 will be pivotal, especially for China’s big tech sector,” said CMC Markets’ analyst Kelvin Wong.

    Nasdaq 100 futures were down 1% late in Asia trade.

    In foreign exchange markets, commodity-linked currencies forged ahead as prices of growth-sensitive raw materials from copper to crude oil traded around milestone highs.

    The Australian and Canadian dollars hit three-year peaks of $0.7945 and C$1.2560 respectively. [FRX/]

    The New Zealand dollar also hit a three-year peak at $0.7384 after the central bank sounded upbeat on the economy even as it signalled – like Powell – that rates would be staying low.

    Copper hit a 9-1/2 year high in London and Shanghai while benchmark Brent crude futures slipped 0.4% to $65.10 a barrel after hitting a one-year high of $66.79 on Tuesday. U.S. crude futures fell 0.8% to $61.17. [O/R]

    Later on Wednesday traders’ focus will turn to German GDP data, further testimony from Powell as well as speeches from Fed members Richard Clarida and Lael Brainard.

    Price moves in a handful of hot assets popular with speculators – from bitcoin to Tesla and U.S. tech shares more broadly will also be closely watched as the rise in bond yields tests their stretched valuations.

    (Reporting by Tom Westbrook in Singapore. Additional reporting by Echo Wang in Miami; Editing by Lincoln Feast & Simon Cameron-Moore)

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