SYDNEY (REUTERS) – Asian share markets eased on Friday (March 19) as a spike in global bond yields soured sentiment toward richly priced tech stocks, while a stampede out of crowded positions in crude oil caused the sharpest setback in months.

Having plunged 7 per cent overnight, Brent crude futures were down another 38 cents at US$62.90 a barrel, while US crude shed 35 cents to US$59.65.

The retreat wiped out four weeks of gains in a single session and might mark the end of a five-month bull run.

Equities were also choppy as a pullback on Wall Street knocked Japan’s Nikkei down 0.7 per cent and South Korea 1 per cent. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan followed with a fall of 0.5 per cent.

Nasdaq futures edged up 0.1 per cent, after a sharp 3 per cent drop overnight, while S&P 500 futures added 0.2 per cent. Markets are now braced for the outcome of a Bank of Japan policy meeting where it is widely expected to loosen its control of bond yields and trim buying of ETFs, tweaks aimed at making the stimulus package more sustainable. Investors are still reflecting on the US Federal Reserve’s pledge to keep rates near zero out to 2024 even as it lifted forecasts for economic growth and inflation.

Fed chair Jerome Powell seems likely to drive home the dovish message next week with no less than three appearances lined up.

“Stronger growth and higher inflation but no rate hikes is a potent cocktail for risk assets and equity markets,” said Nomura economist Andrew Ticehurst.

“The message for bonds is more mixed: while the anchoring of the short end is a positive, market participants may come to worry that the forecast rise in inflation might not be temporary and that the Fed risks ‘overcooking it’.”

Yields on US 10-year notes spiked to the highest since early 2020 at 1.754 per cent and were last at 1.72 per cent. If sustained, this would be the seventh straight week of increases worth a huge 64 basis points in total.

The drastic bearish steepening of the yield curve reflects the risk the Fed is serious about keeping short-term rates low until inflation accelerates, so requiring longer-term bonds to offer fatter returns to compensate.

The latest BofA survey of investors showed that rising inflation and the bond “taper tantrum” had replaced COVID-19 as their number one risk.

While still very bullish on economic growth, company earnings and stocks, respondents feared a sharp setback for equities should 10-year yields cross 2 per cent.

The jump in Treasury yields provided some support to the US dollar, though analysts fret that faster US economic growth will also widen the current account deficit to levels that will ultimately drag on the currency.

For now, the dollar index had bounced to 91.855, from a low of 91.30 to leave it slightly firmer for the week.

It also nudged up on the low-yielding yen to 109.01, just off the recent 10-month top of 109.36. The euro eased back to US$1.1914, having repeatedly failed to crack resistance at US$1.1990/1.2000.

The rise in yields has weighed on gold, which offers no fixed return, and left it flat at US$1,732 an ounce.