SYDNEY: Asian shares slid on Monday as the mounting risk of more aggressive rate hikes in the United States and Europe shoved bond yields and the dollar sharply higher, and tested equity and earnings valuations.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's promise of policy "pain" to contain inflation quashed hopes that the central bank would ride to the rescue of markets as so often in the past.

The tough love message was driven home by European Central Bank board member Isabel Schnabel who warned over the weekend that central banks must now act forcefully to combat inflation, even if that drags their economies into recession.

That triggered a sharp fall in Euribor futures as markets priced in the risk the ECB could hike by 75 basis points next month.

"The main takeaways are taming inflation is job number one for the Fed and the Funds Rate needs to get to a restrictive level of 3.5% to 4.0%," said Jason England, global bonds portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors.

"The rate will need to stay higher until inflation is brought down to their 2% target, thus rate cuts priced into the market for next year are premature."

Futures are now pricing in around a 64% chance the Fed will hike by 75 basis points in September, and see rates peaking in the 3.75-4.0% range.

Much might depend on what the August payrolls figures show this Friday when analysts are looking for a moderate rise of 285,000 following July's blockbuster 528,000 gain.

The hawkish message was not what Wall Street wanted to hear and S&P 500 futures were down a further 1.1%, having shed almost 3.4% on Friday. Nasdaq futures lost 1.5% with tech stocks pressured by the outlook for slower economic growth.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 1.9%. Japan's Nikkei dropped 2.8%, while South Korea shed 2.3%.

Chinese blue chips lost 0.6%, while EUROSTOXX 50 futures slid 1.7% in the wake of the ECB's rate warnings.

 

EURO STRUGGLES

The aggressive chorus from central banks lifted short-term yields globally, while further inverting the Treasury curve as investors priced in an eventual economic downturn.

Two-year U.S. yields rose seven basis points to 3.466%, the highest since late 2007 and far above the ten-year at 3.10%. Yields have also climbed across Europe with double digit gains in Italy, Spain and Portugal.

All of which benefited the safe-haven U.S. dollar as it shot to a fresh two-decade top of 109.40 against a basket of major currencies, breaching the previous high from July.

The dollar gained 0.7% to a five-week peak on the yen at 138.58, with bulls looking to re-test its July top of 139.38.

The euro was struggling at $0.9927, not far from last week's two-decade trough of $0.99005, while sterling slipped to a 2-1/2-year low of $1.1656.

"EUR/USD can remain below parity this week," said Joseph Capurso, head of international economics at CBA.

"Energy security fears will remain front and centre this week as Gazprom will shut its mainline pipeline to deliver gas to Western Europe for three days from 31 August to 2 September," he added. "There are fears gas supply may not be turned back on following the shut-down."

Those fears saw natural gas futures in Europe surge 38% last week, adding further fuel to the inflation bonfire.

The rise of the dollar and yields has been a drag for gold, which was down at $1,725 an ounce.

Oil prices swung higher on speculation OPEC+ could cut output at a meeting on Sept 5.

Brent rose 58 cents to $101.57, while U.S. crude firmed 87 cents to $93.93 per barrel.

(Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)