The Manila Times

Asian markets begin 2018 on a positive note

- Note

HONG KONG: Asian stocks mostly kicked off the year with gains on Tuesday as traders drifted back to work after the festive break, with Hong Kong the standout performer, though the dollar faced fresh pressure from most other currencies.

Regional investors shrugged off dips in New York on the last day of 2017, instead building on the healthy advances fuelled by strong and hopes Donald Trump’s tax

They were also keeping an eye - ures at the end of the week, which will provide fresh clues about the strength of the world’s biggest economy.

Hong Kong led Tuesday’s rally, jumping two percent to its highest level since late 2007, while Shanghai ended 1.2 percent higher, boosted by data showing manufactur­ing activity in China continued to expand in December.

The news comes as China’s leaders look to handle a tricky transition of the economy from state investment and exports to one driven by consumer demand, while also addressing a growing - lution.

economist at IHS Markit in Singapore, warned that Beijing’s success in this would have consequenc­es around the world.

“Risks to the Chinese economy will remain among the key risks

B3

to the global growth outlook in 2018, with to the shock waves from a slowdown,” he told Bloomberg News.

Among other markets, Singapore rose 0.8 economy beat estimates in the final three months of last year.

Seoul added 0.5 percent, with some optimism seen after North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un said he was open to talks with the South. On Tuesday the government in Seoul proposed holding high-level talks with Pyongyang on January 9.

Taipei was up 0.6 percent but Sydney slipped 0.1 percent. Tokyo and Wellington were closed for public holidays.

In early European trade London fell 0.2 percent, Frankfurt shed 0.1 percent and Paris

Oil up, dollar down

On currency markets, the dollar suffered further selling, with analysts pointing to profittaki­ng after the passage of the much-anticipate­d US tax cuts, as well as expected monetary tightening by other central banks that will align them with the Federal Reserve.

Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrader, said the euro was rising as “traders are making the bet that the (European Central Bank) will simply follow the Fed in the year ahead and end quantitati­ve easing and then move toward rate hikes”.

The single currency was above $1.20 and sitting at levels not seen since September, while the pound was also at around three-and-a-halfmonth highs.

However, bitcoin was down from its late Monday levels as the cryptocurr­ency struggles to bounce back from a recent sell-off fuelled

It had soared 25-fold over 2017 to a record high above $19,500 on December 18 before tumbling to just above $12,000 less than a week later. It was sitting at $13,345 in Asia on Tuesday. Oil prices edged up on the back of a weaker dollar, unrest in crude giant Iran and a pause in the number of rigs coming online in the United States.

“There is some momentum for oil at the moment and that could continue,” Ric Spooner, a Sydney-based analyst at CMC Markets, said. He added that market-watchers felt an increase in US shale output appeared not to be as big as expected.

The increase comes after both main contracts enjoyed a second year of rises in 2017, OPEC.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? A man rests in front of boards showing stock prices at a securities company on the first trading day of the year in Beijing on January 2, 2018.
AFP PHOTO A man rests in front of boards showing stock prices at a securities company on the first trading day of the year in Beijing on January 2, 2018.

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