Treasury Yields Bump Up Risks for Asia Stocks as AI Rally Cools

Inflation concerns are threatening to keep US Treasury yields higher for longer, worsening a slide in Asia stocks as investors sell chip shares after their recent rally.

The spread on yields from earnings of MSCI Asia Pacific Index members over US 10-year notes dropped close to two percentage points earlier this month for only the fourth time in the past 12 years. Asian equities fell in the two months following each of the previous three instances, as valuations looked less appealing.

Asia Stocks Are Losing Their Edge Over Bonds

Treasury yields are being driven higher by a combination of the Federal Reserve’s determination to quash inflation by raising borrowing costs, and also by the increase in supply to fund widening US budget deficits. The Fed has hiked its benchmark rate by more than five percentage points since early last year, fueling concern about a possible recession and damage to corporate earnings.

“What we would monitor is whether a sustained rise in US borrowing costs creates the risk of a ‘credit event’ that may be a risk for the US economy as it would tighten credit growth,” Nomura Holdings Inc. strategists including Chetan Seth in Singapore, wrote in a recent note. “This scenario will also likely have some negative implications for Asian stocks.”