The Pak Banker

Asia shares gain despite Wall Street weakness

- TOKYO -AFP

Asian shares shrugged off Wall Street losses and a lackluster start to rally on Thursday, while the dollar edged up as investors priced in more U.S. rate hikes after upbeat economic data.

"European equity traders will likely inherit a positive market," Ipek Ozkardeska­ya, analyst at London Capital Group, said in a note.

Futures portended solid openings for European bourses, with European stock futures STXEc1 up 0.3 percent, Dax futures FDXc1 up 0.4 percent, and FTSE futures FFIc1 and CAC futures FCEc1 each up 0.3 percent.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000P­US was up 0.7 percent.

Australian stocks added 0.2 percent, with sentiment helped by data showing the country's jobless rate dipped to 5.4 percent in October, its lowest since early 2013.

Japan's Nikkei .N225 reversed early losses and surged 1.5 percent as investors hunted for bargains after a six-day losing streak EMini futures for the S&P 500 ESc1 added 0.3 percent after major indexes dropped on Wall Street overnight, with the S&P 500 energy sector .SPNY suffer- ing a four-day decline of 4 percent, weakest such period in 14 months.

Investor concern over the progress of a massive U.S. tax reform plan showed no sign of abating as two Republican lawmakers on Wednesday criticized the Senate's latest proposal.

"If we look at what the markets are focusing on, it's still very much the tax cut debates in the U.S., and how much progress there's going to be on this front," said Mitul Kotecha, head of Asia macro strategy for Barclays in Singapore.

"Clearly, there's some way to go before any deal is on the table, and I think markets perhaps may have reassessed

its some bullish expectatio­ns, and hence some of the dollar weakness yesterday, and probably the fact that the dollar has been unable to make up much lost ground today," Kotecha said. The dollar index .DXY, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major rivals, was slightly higher on the day at 93.828. The euro was steady at $1.1791 EUR=, retreating from a one-month top of $1.1860 on Wednesday.

Against its Japanese counterpar­t, the dollar gained 0.2 percent to 113.04 yen JPY= after it sunk as deep as 112.47 overnight. But it remained well shy of its eight-month high of 114.735 hit last week as Japanese stocks pushed to multi-decade highs. Doubts that the latest round of talks to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement would make much headway in the face of tough U.S. demands saw Mexico's peso MXN= sink to an eight-month low on Wednesday, though it steadied in Asian trade.

Mostly upbeat economic news added to expectatio­ns that the Federal Reserve would not only hike in December, which is now almost fully priced in, but multiple times next year as well.

Core U.S. inflation edged higher and retail sales beat forecasts in a positive sign for growth. The rate outlook could push the two-year Treasury yields US2YT=RR up further from its nine-year peaks, after the yield curve hit its flattest in a decade.

Investors also suspect this tightening will slow the U.S. economy and stop inflation ever getting to the Fed's 2 percent target, pulling down longer-term yields US10YT=RR. As a result the gap between two- and 10-year yield has shrunk to its thinnest premium since late 2007.

"Whether it is the flattest yield curve in a decade, and what that has historical­ly signaled for future growth, the recent troubles in high-yielding credit or lingering geopolitic­al tensions, it is not entirely clear what has markets spooked," ANZ analysts wrote in a note.

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