In This Article:
* U.S. earnings season heats up with major tech names
* PMI surveys to help judge if Q1 slowdown was temporary
* Rising Treasury yields rattle stocks, underpin dollar
* Oil prices just off peaks, lifts inflation expectations
By Wayne Cole
SYDNEY, April 23 (Reuters) - Asian stocks started in muted fashion on Monday as investors braced for a bevy of earnings from the world's largest corporations, while keeping a wary eye on U.S. bond yields as they approached peaks that had triggered ructions in the past.
Markets were also anxiously awaiting surveys on global manufacturing for April to see if economic softness in the first quarter was just a passing phase linked to poor weather and the Lunar New Year holidays.
On the geopolitical front, U.S. President Donald Trump said on Sunday the North Korean nuclear crisis was a long way from being resolved, striking a cautious note a day after the North pledged to end its nuclear tests.
Oil prices edged down in early trade but were not far from their highest since late 2014. The market had wobbled on Friday when Trump tweeted criticism of OPEC's role in pushing up global prices, but quickly steadied.
Brent crude oil futures were off 13 cents at $73.93 per barrel, while U.S. crude eased 16 cents to $68.24.
In stock markets, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dipped 0.1 percent, with South Korea off 0.2 percent.
Japan's Nikkei dithered either side of flat as tech stocks continued to struggle with a warning on waning demand for mobile phones.
Rising bond yields had pressured Wall Street on Friday, though the S&P 500 still managed to end the week with a slight gain.
More than 180 companies in the S&P 500 are due to report results this week including Amazon, Alphabet, Facebook, Microsoft, Boeing and Chevron.
THE 3 PCT BARRIER
The spike in oil has driven up both market expectations of future inflation and long-term bond yields. Yields on 10-year Treasuries finished last week at the highest since early 2014 and at 2.97 percent were again challenging the hugely important 3 percent barrier.
The last time yields neared this number in 2013 it rocked risk appetite and sent stocks sliding.
"Another $5/barrel increase in oil will be enough for U.S. 10-year yields to threaten 3 percent. Oil is now at the cusp of levels where higher prices will spark greater FX and broader asset market volatility," said Deutsche Bank's macro strategist, Alan Ruskin.
Traditionally the dollar had a slight negative correlation with oil, mostly because the dominant causation goes from dollar weakness to rising oil prices, he added.