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Asian stocks face pressure after Wall Street drop

Published on 06/06/2025 06:14 AM

Asian stocks face pressure after Wall Street dropEquity-index futures for Japanese and Australian shares declined, weighed down by lackluster sentiment in US trading that pushed the S&P 500 down by 0.5% and the Nasdaq 100 lower by 0.8%. Treasuries also fell Thursday, while contracts for US stocks were mostly flat in early Asian trading on Friday.By Bloomberg  June 6, 2025, 6:14:44 AM IST (Published)3 Min ReadAsian equities were primed for losses on Friday, tracking falls on Wall Street ahead of US jobs data that may help identify the path ahead for Federal Reserve cuts.

Equity-index futures for Japanese and Australian shares declined, weighed down by lackluster sentiment in US trading that pushed the S&P 500 down by 0.5% and the Nasdaq 100 lower by 0.8%. Treasuries also fell Thursday, while contracts for US stocks were mostly flat in early Asian trading on Friday.

Tesla Inc.’s shares slumped 14% on Thursday as President Donald Trump proposed ending Elon Musk’s government contracts and subsidies after his onetime adviser attacked the Republican’s tax-policy bill. Musk also said he would end the use of Space Exploration Technologies Corp.’s Dragon spacecraft and called for Trump’s impeachment.

The Tesla move weighed on US benchmarks Thursday that had earlier risen as Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping agreed to further trade talks. Trump said talks would begin shortly at a location to be determined as the countries aimed to resolve disputes over tariffs and rare earth minerals.

“The call with Xi is arguably the factor that could have had a lasting impact on markets,” Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone Group, wrote in a note. Instead, the call offered “nothing tangible for traders to work with and attention has quickly pushed back to the Trump-Musk war of words.”

A gauge of US-listed Chinese stocks rose 0.5% Thursday and Hong Kong equity futures were fractionally higher early Friday, running against the broader mood.

The 10-year Treasury yield rose around four basis points to 4.39%, partly unwinding a rally from the prior session. An index of the dollar fell toward its lowest since July 2023.

Later Friday, nonfarm US payroll growth probably decelerated to 125,000 last month after handily beating expectations for a second month in April, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists

“Anything below the 100,000 mark could reignite recession fears while a stronger-than-expected print could perversely be negative for risk assets as it would likely put upward pressure on yields,” said Julien Lafargue, Chief Market Strategist at Barclays Private Bank.

Meanwhile, the Treasury Department declined to name any country a currency manipulator while singling China out for “its lack of transparency,” in a semiannual foreign-exchange report released Thursday. The last time the Treasury designated a country as a manipulator was in 2019, in Trump’s first term, when China got hit with the label. The tag was dropped five months later as a bilateral trade deal was negotiated.

: Taiwan Central Bank Intervened in Forex Market in May

In corporate news, Chinese ride-hailing leader Didi Global Inc. returned to profit in the March quarter, according to Thursday results, in a boost for the company as it gears up for a potential Hong Kong market debut. Elsewhere, Chinese officials summoned the heads of major electric vehicle makers, including BYD Co., to Beijing earlier this week to address concerns about the long-running price war, according to people familiar with the matter.

Commodities broadly held to muted moves. Gold edged higher early Friday after a 0.6% decline Thursday. West Texas Intermediate, the US oil price, was slightly lower Friday after a gain in the prior session.

In Asia, data set for release Friday includes an interest rate decision in India, household spending in Japan and inflation for Thailand and Vietnam.

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