Stock Market Today: Asian shares track Wall Street's selloff after Fed hints at 2 rate cuts in 2025

In This Article:

BANGKOK (AP) — Shares skidded Thursday in Asia after U.S. stocks tumbled to one of their worst days of the year when the Federal Reserve hinted it may deliver fewer rate cuts in 2025 than earlier thought.

The Fed cut its key rate by a quarter of a percentage point to between 4.25% and 4.5%, as expected. Other major central banks have stood pat this week, with the Bank of Japan opting Thursday to keep its benchmark rate at 0.25%. That decision, which was expected, pushed the dollar higher against the Japanese yen.

Asian markets fell, but generally by less than 2%, with Tokyo's Nikkei 225 falling 0.7% to 38,806.70. The dollar was trading at 155.24 yen by midday Thursday, up from 154.79 yen.

A weaker yen tends to push prices higher in Japan, which depends heavily on imports, and that in turn raises pressure on the Bank of Japan to raise rates. Analysts say they expect a BOJ rate hike in January, but also that the central bank is wary of big changes as it waits to see possible shocks from President-elect Donald Trump's policies on tariffs.

There are “high uncertainties” surrounding Japan's business outlook and prices and developments in foreign economies and commodity prices, the BOJ said in a statement.

Chinese markets also declined. The Hang Seng index fell 1% to 19,666.12, while the Shanghai Composite index dropped 0.7% to 3,357.82.

Australia's S&P/ASX 200 shed 1.9% to 8,153.80, while the Kospi in South Korea slipped 1.5% to 2,447.17. India's Sensex fell 0.9%.

In Taiwan, the Taiex lost 1.5%, while Bangkok's SET fell 0.6%.

On Wednesday, the S&P 500 fell 2.9%, just shy of its biggest loss for the year, to close at 5,872.16. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 1,123 points, or 2.6%, to 42,326.87, and the Nasdaq composite dropped 3.6% to 19,392.69.

The Russell 2000 index of small-cap stocks tumbled 4.4%.

Wednesday's rate cut is the third this year after it began in September to lower rates from a two-decade high to support the job market. Wall Street loves easier interest rates, but the cut was already widely expected and investors were more focused on how much more the Fed will cut next year.

A lot is riding on it, particularly after expectations for a series of cuts in 2025 helped the U.S. stock market set an all-time high 57 times so far in 2024.

Fed officials released projections on Wednesday showing the median expectation among them is for two more cuts to the federal funds rate in 2025, or half a percentage point’s worth. That’s down from the four cuts expected just three months ago.