Business World

Stocks in Asia saunter toward historic high, US earnings hurdle

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Asian shares crept toward all-time peaks on Monday after Wall Street boasted its best start to a year in over a decade, with brisk economic growth and benign inflation proving a potent cocktail for risk appetites.

SYDNEY — Asian shares crept toward all-time peaks on Monday after Wall Street boasted its best start to a year in over a decade, with brisk economic growth and benign inflation proving a potent cocktail for risk appetites.

MSCI’s broadest index of AsiaPacifi­c shares outside Japan added 0.20% having climbed 3.10% last week, its strongest performanc­e in six months. At 588.55, the index is within spitting distance of its record top of 591.50 hit in November 2007. The Philippine­s has already been at a record, while Australian stocks eked out another decade top. Japan’s Nikkei was closed for a holiday but last week touched its highest since 1992.

E- Mini futures for the S& P 500 edged up 0.10% while spreadbett­ers pointed to opening gains for Europe.

“It was the global synchroniz­ed growth that drove earnings and equity markets higher last year and the global economy has entered 2018 firing on all cylinders,” said analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, predicting the global economy could expand at four percent or more this year.

“This growth is keeping our quant models bullish and driving earnings revisions to new highs,” they added. “We stay long outside the US, with Asia ex-Japan and Nikkei our growth plays, Europe still for yield.”

Friday’s US jobs report did nothing to challenge that outlook.

While payrolls missed forecasts, the report was perfect for equities given unemployme­nt stayed low but with little sign of the inflationa­ry pressures that would make the Federal Reserve more aggressive in tightening policy.

DATA HURDLES

Wall Street has already enjoyed its best start to a year in more than a decade, with the Dow up 2.30% last week and the S&P 500 2.60%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq led the charge with a rise of 3.40%.

The quarterly US earnings season kicks off this week with the Street expecting solid growth of around 10%, though many companies are also likely to be announcing one- off charges to account for recent tax changes.

The next major data hurdles will be US consumer prices and retail sales on Friday. In Asia, China reports December inflation on Wednesday and internatio­nal trade numbers on Friday.

In currency markets, the dollar has steadied for the moment after a rocky couple of weeks.

With economic activity picking up globally, the dollar has been undermined by expectatio­ns the Fed will not be the only central bank tightening policy this year. —

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