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Asia open: Bonds growl, tech grins, and the Yen staggers toward the abyss

Markets head into the Asia open carrying a curious cocktail of elation and unease—a sugar rush of tech optimism chased with the bitter bite of bond market reality.

Wall Street flirted with new highs overnight, but beneath the champagne bubbles of the S&P 500’s tech-led strength was a deeper, more brooding current.

Nvidia’s H20 AI chips are set to flow back into China, and traders stampeded into the usual suspects. Hong Kong tech stocks rode that wave, gapping up nearly 3% as animal spirits stirred in the East. But the party wore thin by the closing bell, as bond yields reared like stallions breaking their reins, dragging sentiment down with them.

Core CPI in the U.S. may have whispered reassurance, but markets heard the rattle of tariff chains and the thud of fiscal excess. Investors, like wary jungle cats, are now stalking inflation’s every rustle—not waiting for a roar. The 30-year Treasury yield vaulting back above 5% was more than a red flag—it was a flare over the fiscal battlefield. Traders are no longer just pricing risk; they’re bracing for regime change in the bond market.

But if U.S. yields were the tremor, Japan might be the epicenter. The JGB curve is shaking, and yields are melting through long-dormant ceilings. Sunday's Upper House election looms like a typhoon, with Prime Minister Ishiba’s support eroding faster than the BOJ’s credibility. Even modest coalition retention looks dicey, and a loss could tilt the entire policy axis. With the Bank of Japan boxed in and the fiscal taps wide open—opposition parties offering tax slashes while the ruling bloc waves around cash handouts—the yen finds itself cornered, losing ground toward the psychological 150 mark. It’s about credibility, folks !!!.

The yen, once a global safe-haven stalwart, now trades like a punch-drunk fighter—unsteady, unconvincing, and vulnerable to a policy misstep or geopolitical shove. Rising yields should be its savior, but they’re proving more anchor than propeller, reflecting not optimism but desperation in a debt-addled system gasping for traction.

Meanwhile, across the water in China, green shoots are poking through the cracks. June’s economic data surprised to the upside, with Q2 GDP narrowly beating expectations, and a surge in M1 money growth adding a fresh coat of optimism to the outlook. Corporate demand deposits are rising—fast. That’s not just idle cash shifting seats; it’s dry powder being wheeled toward the front lines. Whether in response to U.S. tariffs or domestic stimulus, the mood is shifting from triage to tactics.

If China’s financial arteries are beginning to pump again, the implications go far beyond its own borders. The global inflation engine might get a fresh stoke just as the Fed wrestles with political headwinds and tariff aftershocks. Beijing may not be lighting a fire under global demand just yet, but the tinder is dry, and the match is striking.

So as Asia wakes, it inherits a market that looks robust on the surface—index highs, green candles, headline beats—but with bond markets howling, currencies staggering, and macro undercurrents growing more turbulent. The mirror might say “tech rally-on,” but the rumble beneath suggests something far more delicate: a market whistling past a growing bond market fault line.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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