Asian Stocks Up, But Investors Assesses Selloff in Technology Shares By Investing.com


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By Gina Lee

Investing.com – Asia Pacific stocks were mostly up on Wednesday morning. However, investors continued assessing the impact of a large selloff in technology shares and growing worries of a U.S. recession caused by tightening monetary policies.

Japan’s fell 0.17% by 10:51 PM ET (2:51 AM GMT), while South Korea’s gained 0.68%.

In Australia, the rose 0.60%

Hong Kong’s inched down 0.08%

China’s was up 0.29% while the was X X%. Despite Beijing’s ongoing promises of stimulus, the country’s zero-COVID policy and lockdowns have done considerable economic damage.

JPMorgan (NYSE:) cut its forecast for China’s second-quarter gross domestic product to a fall of 5.4% from a prior forecast of a 1.5% decline, after disappointing data in April.

To support the economy, China’s central bank and banking regulators encouraged lenders to boost loans. Also, China will offer more than 140 billion yuan ($21 billion) in additional tax relief to help offset damage in businesses caused by lockdowns.

fell 2.20%. Shares in advertising-dependent Snap Inc (NYSE:). tumbled 43% to trade below its 2017 IPO price of $17 after the company . The selloff added to declines for peers including Meta, Alphabet (NASDAQ:), and Twitter (NYSE:).

U.S. new home sales fell more than expected in April, and the Richmond Federal Reserve’s assessment of business activity fell to a two-year low.

Investors are shifting their focus to the outlook for monetary policy as worries of a potential recession caused by the tightening monetary policies. They now await the minutes from the last U.S. Federal Reserve meeting, due later today, for more clues on whether the tightening would continue.

“The market is moving its focus, and has been for the last month or so, from inflation concerns to growth concerns,” FL Putnam chief market strategist Ellen Hazen told Bloomberg.

Fed Bank of Atlanta President Raphael Bostic, one of the central bank’s dovish policymakers, urged the Fed to tighten policy with care and avoid ‘recklessness” in an essay he wrote and published by his bank on Tuesday.

In Asia-Pacific, the will hand down its policy decision later in the day, with the following on Thursday.

On the data front, and will release on Thursday.

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