Today.Az » World news » Asia stocks hit four-week high, look forward to stimulus
11 July 2016 [11:45] - Today.Az
By Wayne Cole Asian shares enjoyed a relief rally on Monday as upbeat U.S. jobs data
soothed immediate concerns about the health of the world's largest economy,
while the prospect of more policy stimulus helped keep sovereign yields near
record lows.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
.MIAPJ0000PUS jumped 1.9 percent to a one-month top. Australia
added 1.8 percent and Shanghai .SSEC 1.1 percent.
Stocks in Germany .GDAXI were seen starting 0.9 percent
higher, with the CAC .FCHI up 0.7 pct and the FTSE .FTSE 0.5 percent. EMINI futures for
the S&P 500 ESc1 came within a point of their all-time top.
Japan's
Nikkei .N225 climbed 4.5 percent, its biggest
daily gain in three months, as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe flagged a fresh fiscal
stimulus package after the ruling coalition won a landslide victory in the
upper house.
"Abe's victory boosted confidence in investor sentiment,
and winning a two-thirds majority sends foreign investors a message that Abe's
policies will see a progress," said Hikaru Sato, a senior technical
analyst at Daiwa Securities.
The Asian rebound came after news the U.S. economy added
287,000 jobs last month, well above median forecasts and recovering from a very
weak May report.
In the end, investors concluded the data was not strong
enough to revive the prospect of a rate hike from the Federal Reserve for the
next few months, benefiting bonds and stocks.
The Dow .DJI gained 1.4 percent, while the
S&P 500 .SPX firmed 1.53 percent and the
Nasdaq .IXIC 1.64 percent. The rise set the
seal on an eight-session run that has seen U.S. equities add $1.4 trillion to
market capitalization.
Several Fed officials are scheduled to speak this week,
offering plenty of opportunities for the market to glean clues about policy.
The Bank of England meets on Thursday and might well cut its
0.5 percent interest rate to offset the economic drag from Britain's vote
to leave the European Union.
Governor Mark Carney has already opened the door to easing,
including the expansion of its 375 billion-pound bond-buying program.
NO END TO EU UNCERTAINTY
The only question was timing, with analysts in a Reuters
poll divided on whether a cut would come this week or in August.
Various reports out Monday argued for urgent action, with
consumer spending falling last month, the business outlook darkening by the
most in four years and economic activity in London slowing sharply.
"The outcome of the UK referendum has dealt a
significant shock to the outlook for the global economy," warned Christian
Keller, an economist at Barclays.
"It introduced a higher uncertainty about Europe's future, and raised questions about globalization
more generally," he added. "Confidence and financial channels could
potentially propagate the effects to the U.S.,
China
and beyond."
That was one factor behind the relentless demand for
sovereign debt that has driven down yields, which move inversely to prices, and
kept the pound at its weakest since 1985.
Benchmark U.S.
10-year paper US10YT=RR was paying 1.37 percent, with Japan at -0.28 percent and Germany -0.20
percent.
Sterling
was stuck at $1.2963 GBP=D4 on Monday, having failed
utterly to rebound from the 13 percent loss suffered in the immediate wake of
Brexit.
The Japanese yen eased as the Nikkei rose to reach 101.35
per dollar JPY=, while the euro stayed on the
defensive at $1.1049 EUR= having touched a low of $1.1003
on Friday.
In commodity markets, spot gold XAU= was steady around
$1,364.80 per ounce.
Crude prices edged down to near two-month lows on seasonally
weak consumption, despite comments from Saudi Arabia's oil minister that
the oil market was becoming more balanced.
Brent crude LCOc1 was down 16 cents at $46.60 a barrel,
while NYMEX crude CLc1 fell 23 cents to $45.18.
/By Reuters/
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