Asian Markets Decline as Fed Expresses Concerns Over Trump’s Policies

HONG KONG: Asian markets turned negative today amid Federal Reserve (Fed) concerns that US President Donald Trump’s tariffs and immigration measures could reignite inflation.

The losses come despite a second-straight record close on Wall Street and follow a recent rally as traders have rolled with the president’s latest tariff salvos, betting they are being used as negotiating tactics.

Minutes from the US central bank’s January meeting suggested officials were not likely to cut interest rates anytime soon – having reduced them at three successive meetings – citing worries about the impact of Trump’s policies.

Decision-makers expected that “under the appropriate monetary policy, inflation would continue to move toward (their target of) 2%, although progress could remain uneven,” the minutes said.

The minutes also revealed that officials were mindful that the debt ceiling needed to be lifted to prevent the country from defaulting on its obligations, which could deal a hefty blow to the global economy.

The government hit its limit in January but the Treasury has managed to keep things ticking over by using so-called extraordinary measures.

“The overall tone of the meeting minutes was unsurprising, considering that Fed chair Jerome Powell had said on no less than five separate occasions during the January press conference that the committee did not need to be ‘in a hurry’ to make further adjustments to policy rates,” said Ryan Wang, US economist at HSBC.

While all three main indexes in New York rose, with the S&P 500 at another all-time peak, Asia stumbled.

Hong Kong, which has climbed around 15% so far this year, dropped 2% as the China tech surge came to an end.

Tokyo was weighed by a stronger yen as the Bank of Japan eyes more interest rate hikes, while Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Wellington, Taipei and Manila also retreated.

Dealers are also keeping a nervous eye on developments in Europe after Brussels and Kyiv were excluded from the first high-level talks between the US and Russia since the start of the war in Ukraine.

Trump also raised eyebrows by calling Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky a “dictator” yesterday, widening a personal rift with major implications for efforts to end the conflict triggered by Russia’s invasion three years ago.

The US has provided essential funding and arms to Ukraine, but Trump made an abrupt policy shift by opening talks with Moscow just weeks after he returned to the White House.

“A Dictator without Elections, Zelenskyy better move fast or he is not going to have a Country left,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

Zelensky was elected in 2019 for a five-year term and has remained leader under martial law imposed as his country fights for its survival. -AFP