The Borneo Post

Asian shares gain as Shanghai stocks extend recovery

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TOKYO: Asian shares inched up yesterday, as Chinese stocks extended their recovery to hit eightweek highs on receding fears about the trade war as well as hopes China’s weighting in the global benchmark will be increased.

Other markets were more subdued as US bond yields edged near a seven-year peak ahead of a widely expected rate hike by the Federal Reserve and as internatio­nal oil prices rose to four-year highs.

MSCI’s broadest index of AsiaPacifi­c shares outside Japan gained 0.4 per cent. Shanghai shares rose 1.5 per cent.

Global index provider MSCI said it will consider quadruplin­g the weighting of Chinese big-caps in its global benchmarks and also proposed adding mid-caps and shares listed on Shenzhen’s startup board ChiNext.

The news further improved the mood of the market, where fears about the trade war have been offset by hopes Beijing’s stimulus could help the economy weather the impact of US tariffs.

In Japan, the Nikkei was almost flat.

Wall Street shares were mixed overnight, as rises in energy shares on higher oil prices and gains in consumer discretion­ary shares following strong US consumer confidence were offset by falls in many other sectors.

US consumer confidence hit an 18-year high, adding to a string of recent US data that pointed to the strong US economic momentum, despite concerns about trade wars US President Donald Trump is waging.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.26 per cent, the S&P 500 lost 0.13 per cent while the Nasdaq Composite added 0.18 per cent.

The utility sector, sometimes seen as an alternativ­e to bonds because of the relative steadiness of their business, was the worst performer as investors braced for a rate hike by the Federal Reserve later on Wednesday.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield rose to as high as 3.113 per cent, near its seven-year peak of 3.128 per cent touched on May 18. It last stood at 3.098 per cent.

Fed funds rates futures implied traders are fully pricing in a rate hike on Wednesday, and another 85 per cent chance the Fed would raise rates again in December.

“The focus will be on whether the Fed will indicate its tightening is coming to an end. The Fed may not do so today but I expect markets will soon start looking to that scenario,” said Akira Takei, bond fund manager at Asset Management One.

The Fed’s past policy statements have shown that policy makers see 2.9 per cent, about 100 basis points above the current levels, as an appropriat­e level in the longer run.

That means the Fed would hit that level with only two more rate hikes, if it will bump up rates twice more this year as widely expected.

Takei of Asset Management One noted that there are already signs that higher rates are starting to hurt the US economy, such as a rise in delinquenc­ies of consumer loans, adding the dollar’s softness could be an early sign of growing focus over an end to the US tightening cycle. — Reuters

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