Markets fell in Asia on Thursday as traders contemplated the prospect of more central bank interest rate hikes as they struggle to tame persistently high inflation.
Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell dealt a blow to investors hoping its tightening cycle may be near an end by warning US lawmakers it "may make sense" to keep lifting.
His comments came as pressure built on the Bank of England to announce a bigger-than-expected increase at Thursday's meeting after news that United Kingdom inflation was unchanged at 8.7 per cent in May, confounding forecasts.
The European Central Bank last week joined Canada and Australia in hiking further, with Switzerland and Norway tipped to follow suit.
After holding rates last week for the first time since starting last March, speculation had been growing that the Fed was close to calling it a day altogether, thanks to slowing price rises and a softer jobs market.
However, in congressional testimony on Wednesday, Powell said, "Given how far we've come, it may make sense to move rates higher but to do so at a more moderate pace."
He added that while progress was being made -- inflation dropped to 4 per cent last month from 4.9 per cent in April -- it "has consistently surprised us -- and essentially all other forecasters -- by being more persistent than expected."
Two more rate hikes this year was "a pretty good guess," he said.
The Fed has already raised its benchmark lending rate by five percentage points since March 2022, from close to zero to 5 per cent - 5.25 per cent.
Traders say there is a 75 per cent probability officials will hike by 25 basis points at their July meeting, according to data from CME Group.
The expected increase in rates has revived worries the economy will tip into recession.
"The Fed is clearly not nearing the end of its tightening cycle and if other central banks seem poised to deliver more than a couple rate hikes, that might make it easier for the Fed to remain aggressive with tightening," said OANDA's Edward Moya.
"Powell said lowering inflation has a long way to go and that could very well mean that they won't stop until the fall."
All three main indexes on Wall Street fell for a third straight session, and Asia followed on Thursday.
Sydney, Singapore, Manila, Wellington and Jakarta were all in the red and Tokyo was flat, though Seoul eked out a gain.
Hong Kong and Shanghai were closed.
Markets across Asia have gone into reverse this week, having enjoyed a healthy run-up in previous weeks on hopes that the tightening cycle was nearing an end and on talk that China was preparing a raft of stimulus measures.
The optimism was fanned by the central bank's decision to cut borrowing costs last week, though a smaller-than-expected reduction in the main benchmark rate this week knocked confidence.
The failure of Beijing to unveil any concrete policies to kickstart the stuttering economy has fed fears that the recovery from a Covid lockdown-induced slowdown has already come to an end.
Analysts said the traders are now looking ahead to a key meeting next month that will be headed by President Xi Jinping.