The Manila Times

Nikkei surges but most of Asia unable to extend gains

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HONG KONG: Japanese stocks soared Tuesday on a weak yen as the dollar was lifted by expected monetary tightening and renewed hopes for Donald Trump’s economic agenda, but most other Asian markets retreated after recent gains.

Equities had rallied Monday as investors turned their attention to macro issues, particular­ly a Federal Reserve policy meeting and Trump’s maiden speech to the UN General Assembly.

While the US central bank is not expected to raise interest rates this week, remarks from the Fed and its boss Janet Yellen will be pored over for clues about future moves -- with talk of another rise -- and its plans to wind down the vast bond-buying stimulus put in

Analysts said that despite the expected tightening, investors were again optimistic that Trump can push through the market-friendly policies that helped drive a global rally at the start of the year.

“We are not overly concerned about (tightening)”, Merrill Lynch strategy Matthew Diczok told Bloomberg Television.

“If you model it out, over about the next three years they’ll take out about $1.3 trillion or so. That’s only a third of what they put into the market. So it’s going to be a very slow, very gradual, very deliberate and it shouldn’t lead to market at all.”

After the selling earlier this month fuelled by North Korea’s nuclear test, traders returned to buying ways. On Monday global markets ended mostly up, with the S&P 500 and Dow on Wall Street each hitting fresh highs.

“The surge was yet another testament that the reinvigora­tion of the Trump trades is gaining traction,” said Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrader.

“Recent happenings have seen Trump’s leadership change and it is clear markets are seeing that,” he added.

Japanese dealers returned from a three-day weekend Tuesday and picked up the baton, sending the Nikkei two percent higher with exporters buoyed by the dollar’s push towards 112 yen.

However, elsewhere in the

region markets turned lower as traders cashed out.

Hong Kong closed down 0.4 percent, Shanghai ended off 0.2 percent, Singapore lost 0.2 percent and Sydney dipped 0.1 percent. Seoul was off 0.1 percent, with Taipei 0.5 percent off and Manila 1.3 percent down.

In early trade London and Paris each dipped 0.1 percent, while

On forex markets talk of more stringent monetary policy supported the dollar, with the pound rowing back from levels above $1.36 after the head of the Bank of England indicated possible British rate rises could be slow and gradual.

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