Chinese
stock-index futures dropped after MSCI Inc. held off from adding
mainland stocks to its benchmark indexes. Asian bonds tracked a selloff
in the U.S. and Europe, while oil rose a second day.
SGX
FTSE China A50 Index futures expiring this month fell 1.2 percent at
10:07 a.m. Tokyo time. Yields on Japanese government notes due in a
decade climbed four basis points to 0.49 percent, as rates on similar
maturity Australian and New Zealand debt rose at least six basis points.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 0.1 percent, with Japan’s Topix index
rebounding from a three-week low. U.S. index futures climbed 0.1
percent. Oil in New York rose 0.8 percent.
MSCI
said China still needs to improve market accessibility and address
concerns about the ownership status of mainland shares before they’re
eligible for global equity gauges. Bets the Federal Reserve is edging
closer to raising U.S. interest rates this year fueled Treasury losses
Tuesday, while signs of a pickup in euro-area growth sent most European
bonds lower. Oil industry data pointed to a sixth week of declines in
American crude inventories.
Yields
on Australian 10-year bonds jumped 10 basis points, or 0.10 percentage
point, to 3.06 percent, while New Zealand rates climbed six basis points
to 3.92 percent for their seventh increase eight days.
Source : Bloomberg
0 komentar :
Post a Comment