<p>Asian stocks rose on Tuesday as traders in Korea returned from holidays in a mood to catch up on a global bounce, while other markets held steady ahead of US inflation data that will offer a crucial guide to the interest rate outlook.</p>.<p>Wall Street indexes posted a fourth straight session of gains overnight, while the US dollar retreated further from milestone highs - partly on hopes that the prices data, due at 1230 GMT, might offer another signal that inflation has peaked.</p>.<p>MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.6 per cent, led by a 2 per cent jump for South Korea's Kospi. Japan's Nikkei tacked on 0.3 per cent.</p>.<p>S&P 500 futures were flat, as were European futures . Easing oil prices have markets optimistic that headline inflation will steady or slow in the United States, and that this can reduce the need for future interest rate hikes.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/economy-business/double-whammy-for-economy-inflation-rises-iip-growth-slows-1144439.html" target="_blank">Double whammy for economy: inflation rises, IIP growth slows</a></strong></p>.<p>Analysts warn that core inflation is likely to march on, however, and that the near-term rate implications are unclear.</p>.<p>"It's too early to be celebrating the end of inflation, as some market participants seem already to be doing," said ING economist Rob Carnell.</p>.<p>US crude is hovering below $90 a barrel, down nearly 30 per cent since the middle of June and roughly where it traded before Russia's invasion of Ukraine.</p>.<p>Interest rate futures imply a 90 per cent chance that the Federal Reserve lifts its benchmark interest rate by 75 basis points at next week's policy meeting - a position that is perhaps most vulnerable to a downside CPI surprise.</p>.<p>"The market-implied probability of a third 75 bp rate hike for September has increased noticeably in recent days," said NatWest Markets' US rates strategist Jan Nevruzi.</p>.<p>"Results close to expectations for the August CPI report may not change the outcome too much in terms of the market's expectation," he said.</p>.<p>"If officials do decide to go with another 75bp, more than our long-standing call for 50bp...we suspect policymakers emphasise how they are front-loading hikes."</p>.<p><strong>Dollar dip</strong></p>.<p>Asia data out on Tuesday offered a cloudy picture of regional economies. A 9 per cent year-on-year jump in Japanese wholesale prices points to pressure on corporate margins, yet a slowdown in gains for August holds some hope of relief.</p>.<p>In New Zealand rate hikes which began a year ago are starting to bite, sending home prices down 6 per cent since last August.</p>.<p>The investment banking world is also offering a counterpoint to stockmarkets' enthusiasm. Goldman Sachs is mulling job cuts, a person familiar with the plans told <em>Reuters</em> overnight.</p>.<p>Buyout giant KKR is refusing to improve a takeover bid for Australian hospital operator Ramsay Health Care .</p>.<p>In currency markets the dollar is off recent peaks. Tailwinds from last week's European rate hike have the euro extending a bounce and above parity at $1.0127.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/rupee-rises-2-paise-to-close-at-7955-against-us-dollar-1144410.html" target="_blank">Rupee rises 2 paise to close at 79.55 against US dollar</a></strong></p>.<p>Even the battered Japanese yen is having a breather at 142.57 per dollar - a bit stronger than last week's 24-year low at 144.99 with some investors closing bets on a further slide as risks of official intervention increase.</p>.<p>US Treasury yields rose overnight after some lacklustre auctions. Selling was heaviest at the very long end, with the 30-year yield up about 6 bps to around 3.5 per cent.</p>.<p>Benchmark 10-year yields steadied at 3.3405 per cent in Tokyo trade on Tuesday, beneath the two-year yield of 3.5506 per cent.</p>.<p>Gold and cryptocurrencies have crept higher on the softening dollar. Spot gold last held at $1,723 an ounce, while bitcoin was at $22,245.</p>
<p>Asian stocks rose on Tuesday as traders in Korea returned from holidays in a mood to catch up on a global bounce, while other markets held steady ahead of US inflation data that will offer a crucial guide to the interest rate outlook.</p>.<p>Wall Street indexes posted a fourth straight session of gains overnight, while the US dollar retreated further from milestone highs - partly on hopes that the prices data, due at 1230 GMT, might offer another signal that inflation has peaked.</p>.<p>MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.6 per cent, led by a 2 per cent jump for South Korea's Kospi. Japan's Nikkei tacked on 0.3 per cent.</p>.<p>S&P 500 futures were flat, as were European futures . Easing oil prices have markets optimistic that headline inflation will steady or slow in the United States, and that this can reduce the need for future interest rate hikes.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/economy-business/double-whammy-for-economy-inflation-rises-iip-growth-slows-1144439.html" target="_blank">Double whammy for economy: inflation rises, IIP growth slows</a></strong></p>.<p>Analysts warn that core inflation is likely to march on, however, and that the near-term rate implications are unclear.</p>.<p>"It's too early to be celebrating the end of inflation, as some market participants seem already to be doing," said ING economist Rob Carnell.</p>.<p>US crude is hovering below $90 a barrel, down nearly 30 per cent since the middle of June and roughly where it traded before Russia's invasion of Ukraine.</p>.<p>Interest rate futures imply a 90 per cent chance that the Federal Reserve lifts its benchmark interest rate by 75 basis points at next week's policy meeting - a position that is perhaps most vulnerable to a downside CPI surprise.</p>.<p>"The market-implied probability of a third 75 bp rate hike for September has increased noticeably in recent days," said NatWest Markets' US rates strategist Jan Nevruzi.</p>.<p>"Results close to expectations for the August CPI report may not change the outcome too much in terms of the market's expectation," he said.</p>.<p>"If officials do decide to go with another 75bp, more than our long-standing call for 50bp...we suspect policymakers emphasise how they are front-loading hikes."</p>.<p><strong>Dollar dip</strong></p>.<p>Asia data out on Tuesday offered a cloudy picture of regional economies. A 9 per cent year-on-year jump in Japanese wholesale prices points to pressure on corporate margins, yet a slowdown in gains for August holds some hope of relief.</p>.<p>In New Zealand rate hikes which began a year ago are starting to bite, sending home prices down 6 per cent since last August.</p>.<p>The investment banking world is also offering a counterpoint to stockmarkets' enthusiasm. Goldman Sachs is mulling job cuts, a person familiar with the plans told <em>Reuters</em> overnight.</p>.<p>Buyout giant KKR is refusing to improve a takeover bid for Australian hospital operator Ramsay Health Care .</p>.<p>In currency markets the dollar is off recent peaks. Tailwinds from last week's European rate hike have the euro extending a bounce and above parity at $1.0127.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/rupee-rises-2-paise-to-close-at-7955-against-us-dollar-1144410.html" target="_blank">Rupee rises 2 paise to close at 79.55 against US dollar</a></strong></p>.<p>Even the battered Japanese yen is having a breather at 142.57 per dollar - a bit stronger than last week's 24-year low at 144.99 with some investors closing bets on a further slide as risks of official intervention increase.</p>.<p>US Treasury yields rose overnight after some lacklustre auctions. Selling was heaviest at the very long end, with the 30-year yield up about 6 bps to around 3.5 per cent.</p>.<p>Benchmark 10-year yields steadied at 3.3405 per cent in Tokyo trade on Tuesday, beneath the two-year yield of 3.5506 per cent.</p>.<p>Gold and cryptocurrencies have crept higher on the softening dollar. Spot gold last held at $1,723 an ounce, while bitcoin was at $22,245.</p>