Investing.com– Most Asian stocks retreated on Wednesday with technology-heavy indexes falling in anticipation of earnings from market darling Nvidia, while Australian stocks sank on a sticky inflation print.
Persistent concerns over China also kept sentiment towards Asia on edge, after Canada said it will impose steep trade tariffs on the region’s biggest economy.
Regional markets took middling cues from Wall Street, as the and crept higher to record highs. But the lagged amid some caution before Nvidia’s earnings. Expectations of rate cuts also spurred a pivot out of technology and into more economically sensitive sectors.
U.S. stock index futures fell in Asian trade.
Asia tech retreats, Nvidia earnings awaited
Tech-heavy Asian bourses retreated on Wednesday, with chipmaking stocks skittish ahead of earnings from NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:).
South Korea’s fell 0.5%, while Japan’s JP225 and Hong Kong’s indexes lost about 0.3% and 0.8%, respectively.
Focus will be squarely on whether Nvidia continued to benefit from strong demand for artificial intelligence- a trend that saw the stock surge nearly 160% in value so far in 2024.
Nvidia is considered as a bellwether for the AI industry, with any takeaways from its earnings, due later on Wednesday, likely to factor into Asian technology stocks.
Stocks with direct exposure to Nvidia were a mixed bag. Taiwan’s TSMC (TW:) (NYSE:) was flat in Taipei trade, while Japanese semiconductor testing equipment maker Advantest Corp. (TYO:) surged nearly 3%.
South Korean memory chip maker SK Hynix Inc (KS:), a major Nvidia supplier, fell 0.1%. Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (HK:)- China’s biggest chipmaker and a local competitor for Nvidia, slid more than 13%.
Australian stocks dip as CPI data fuels RBA rate fears
Australia’s was among the worst performers in Asia, losing 0.6% after consumer price index data read stronger than expected for July.
rose 3.5%, slightly above expectations and well above the Reserve Bank of Australia’s 2% to 3% annual target. The reading fueled concerns that sticky inflation could potentially invite a rate hike by the RBA, after policymakers warned of such a scenario earlier in August.
While underlying CPI fell, it was still relatively high.
Broader Asian markets also retreated. China’s and indexes fell 0.7% and 0.3%, respectively, as sentiment towards the country was dented by Canada imposing steep trade tariffs on China’s electric vehicle industry.
While the economic impact of the tariffs is expected to be negative, investors feared the onset of a renewed trade war between China and the west, given that the U.S. and the European Union had also enacted similar tariffs earlier this year.
Some major Chinese earnings are also on tap, with EV makers BYD Co (HK:) and Li Auto (NASDAQ:) Inc (HK:) set to report later on Wednesday.
Futures for India’s index pointed to a muted open, with the index facing resistance after crossing 25,000 points.