In This Article:
* Asian stock markets : https://tmsnrt.rs/2zpUAr4
* Nikkei bounces 1.2% after Wall St steadies
* China data seen bleak amid zero-COVID drive
* Dollar holds near 20-year highs, euro soft
By Wayne Cole
SYDNEY, May 16 (Reuters) - Asian share markets were attempting a rare rally on Monday after Wall Street managed a bounce from deep lows, though investors were also braced for bad news from Chinese economic data due later in the session.
Forecasts are for a fall of 6.1% in China's annual retail sales, while industrial output is seen rising just 0.4%. Risks are to the downside given new bank lending in China hit the lowest in nearly four and half years in April.
"The reports should highlight the economic damage from the country's zero-COVID policy - we expect contractions in production and demand indicators," said Bruce Kasman, head of economic research at JPMorgan.
"Having lowered our full-year GDP forecast to 4.3%, the policy response to weakness remains surprisingly tame," he added. "The CNY is where the action is, as the PBOC has been silent despite the recent sharp depreciation."
Beijing on Sunday did allow a further cut in mortgage loan interest rates for some home buyers and there was talk the central bank might cut its medium term lending rate on Monday by 10 basis points.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan firmed 0.3%, after shedding 2.7% last week to hit a two-year low.
Japan's Nikkei rose 1.2%, having lost 2.1% last week even as a weak yen offered some support to exporters.
S&P 500 stock futures edged up a further 0.3% in early trade, while Nasdaq futures added 0.6%. Both remain far from last year's highs, with the S&P having fallen for six straight weeks.
Sky-high inflation and rising interest rates saw U.S. consumer confidence sink to an 11-year low in early May and raised the stakes for April retail sales due on Tuesday.
DOWNGRADING GROWTH
A hyper-hawkish Federal Reserve has driven a sharp tightening in financial conditions, which led Goldman Sachs to cut its 2022 GDP growth forecast to 2.4%, from 2.6%. Growth in 2023 is now seen at 1.6% on an annual basis down from 2.2%.
"Our financial conditions index has tightened by over 100 basis points, which should create a drag on GDP growth of about 1pp," said Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius.
"We expect that the recent tightening in financial conditions will persist, in part because we think the Fed will deliver on what is priced."
Futures imply 50 basis-point hikes in both June and July and rates between 2.5-3.0% by year end, from the current 0.75-1.0%.