The Manila Times

Energy firms lead Asian equities rally on OPEC deal

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HONG KONG: Energy shares led a rally across Asian markets Thursday and oil built on the previous day’s near 10 percent surge after OPEC hammered out a last- minute deal to cut oil output for the first time in eight years.

Adding to the buying sentiment was a better- than expected reading on Chinese factory output that provided fresh hope the world’s number two economy was stabilisin­g after years of slowing growth.

The OPEC exporters’ group, meeting in Vienna, said its 14 members had agreed on specific targets that will reduce production by 1.2 million barrels a day from next month, while key non- member Russia also committed to a reduction.

Both main contracts surged on the announceme­nt, which ended weeks of uncertaint­y and volatility on crude markets as the key players bickered over who would shoulder the biggest burden of the cuts, leading to worries a deal would not be made.

Brent and West Texas Intermedia­te both climbed more than one percent to sit above $ 50 in Asian trade, pushing regional investors back into energy firms on hopes the higher prices would boost revenues.

“The words ‘ OPEC’ and ‘exceed expectatio­ns’ have rarely, if ever, been used in the same sentence. However yesterday’s production deal seems to have done just that,” Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at OANDA, said in a note.

“Cuts have been shared across all members, including the recalcitra­nt Iran and Iraq.”

Regarding the dip in oil prices Thursday, Halley added: “I think the market in Asia is just catching its breath after last night’s moves.”

China factory boost

Still, the deal lit a fire under energy firms. Tokyo- listed Inpex was the big gainer, piling on 10 percent, while Woodside Petroleum soared more than six percent. CNOOC ploughed 6.5 percent higher in Hong Kong and Petro-China 5.5 percent.

Among stock markets, Japan’s Nikkei ended up 1.1 percent at its highest close this year, while Hong Kong added 0.4 percent in the afternoon and Shanghai closed up 0.7 percent.

Sydney gained 1.1 percent, Seoul was flat and Manila added two percent. There were also healthy advances in Singapore, Jakarta, Taipei and Wellington.

The removal of uncertaint­y provided fresh support to the dollar, which rallied towards 115 yen, its highest mark since February, before easing back slightly. And gold suffered a sell- off, sinking 1.7 percent to $ 1,167 as investors walked away from safe- haven assets that are popular in times of uncertaint­y.

In China, official figures showed a gauge of manufactur­ing activity had hit its highest level since mid- 2014, although analysts pointed out the reading was a mixed blessing.

“Underlying data shows that this is pretty clearly heavy- industry driven, with help from credit and little contributi­on from consumptio­n,” Christophe­r Balding, an associate professor at the HSBC School of Business at Peking University in Shenzhen, told Bloomberg News.

“While this may prop up growth in the shor t term, it is clearly not rebalancin­g or deleveragi­ng.”

And Raymond Yeung, chief greater China economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group in Hong Kong, warned: “With this growth momentum, the ( central bank) doesn’t need to ease.”

Focus now turns to the release Friday of US jobs data. With dealers certain the Federal Reserve will hike interest rates this month, the latest figures could provide some insight into its plans for future increases over the next year.

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