The dollar vaulted to 13 1/2-year highs against a basket of major currencies as U.S. bond yields rose, leaving Asian stocks vulnerable to potential rotation out of emerging markets to the United States.

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A news photographer take photos of monitors displaying the Japanese yen's exchange rate against British pound (top) and Japan's Nikkei share average at a foreign exchange trading company in Tokyo, Japan, June 27, 2016. 

 

 

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS dipped 0.3 percent in early trade to hover just above its four-month low touched earlier in the week. It looks set to log its fourth straight week of losses.

The dollar's rise, however, was a boon for Japan's exporter-driven Nikkei average .N225, which rose 0.9 percent to a 10-month high.

On Wall Street, the benchmark S&P 500 index .SPX rose 0.5 percent to within a hair of its record high as bank stocks were boosted by bets on higher interest rates and consumer discretionary stocks were helped by favorable economic data and earnings.

U.S. consumer prices posted their biggest increase in six months, while housing starts surged to a 9-year high and jobless claims fell to the lowest level since November 1973.

All these data fit nicely into the current market's theme that U.S. inflation is likely to accelerate under Trump administration's policies such as tax cuts, increased fiscal spending and more trade protection for domestic industries.

The 10-year U.S. Treasuries yield US10YT=RR rose to 2.326 percent, its highest since January. The two-year U.S. Treasuries yield US2YT=RR rose to a 10 1/2-month high of 1.058 percent.

"I think the rises in U.S. yields have been driven by excessive optimism in the stock market on Trump's economic policies," said Shuji Shirota, head of macro economic strategy at HSBC in Tokyo.

Rising yields reflect market players' reassessment of the Fed's policy path down the road, although Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen told the Joint Economic Committee of Congress on Thursday that Trump's election has done nothing to change the Federal Reserve's plans for a rate increase "relatively soon."

Yet market perceptions have clearly changed, with money market futures pricing in about a 90 percent chance of a Fed rate hike in December.

They are also pricing in one or more rate hikes next year, a sea change from before the election when they priced in a less than 50 percent chance of a 2017 rate hike, assuming the dovish Yellen would be extremely cautious in raising rates.

The dollar rose to 110.34 yen JPY=, its highest level since early June. The euro EUR=slumped to $1.0620, a low last seen almost a year ago.

The dollar's index against a basket of six major currencies .DXY =USD rose above its "double top" touched in March and December of 2015. The index now stands at its highest level since 2003.

"Double top" is a technical analysis term describing a currency (or other liquid asset) rising to a high, falling, and then rising again to the same level. Breaking the double top is often seen as a bullish sign by technical analysts.

Gold XAU= slumped to 5 1/2-month low of $1,211.6 per ounce and oil prices, which have been supported by hopes the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries would reach an agreement to cap production at its meeting in Vienna on Nov. 30, were hit by the dollar's strength. U.S. crude futures CLc1 slipped to $45.05 per barrel from Thursday's two-week high of $46.58.

Source: Reuters