Market News

    Shares muted in Asia, high yields test lofty valuations

    Asian shares made a muted start to the week on Monday as high Treasury yields challenged rich Wall Street equity valuations while underpinning the U.S. dollar near multi-month peaks.

    Volumes were light with the New Year holiday looming and a rather bare data diary this week. China has the PMI factory surveys out on Tuesday, while the U.S. ISM survey for December is due on Friday.

    MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dipped 0.2%, but is still 16% higher for the year. Japan's Nikkei eased 0.9%, but is sitting on gains of around 20% for 2024.

    South Korea's main index has not been so fortunate, having run into a storm of political uncertainty in recent weeks, and is saddled with losses of 9% for the year. It was last up 0.3%.

    Shares of South Korean budget carrier Jeju Air hit their lowest level on record on Monday, in the wake of a plane crash that killed 179 people.

    Chinese blue chips added 0.3%, to be up almost 16% on the year with almost all that gain coming in just two weeks in September after Beijing promised more stimulus.

    EUROSTOXX 50 futures firmed 0.1%, while FTSE futures and DAX futures were little changed.

    S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures were both off 0.1%. Wall Street suffered a broad-based sell off on Friday with no obvious trigger, though volumes were just two-thirds of the daily average. [.N]

    The S&P 500 is up 25% for the year and the Nasdaq 31%, which is stretching valuations when compared to the risk-free return of Treasuries. Investors are counting on earnings per share growth of just over 10% in 2025, versus a 12.47% expected rise in 2024, according to LSEG data.