The Philippine Star

Asia stocks edge up on cautious trades

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TOKYO (Reuters) —Asian stocks edged up on Friday, thanks to gains on Wall Street, but signs of widening cracks in the global economy curbed risk appetite as markets looked to a key US job report that could determine whether the Federal Reserve cuts rates further.

Investors have been caught out by a set of weak US data this week, including surveys on services and manufactur­ing sectors, deepening fears the Sino-US trade war is starting to hurt growth in the world’s biggest economy.

“We’ll probably see a bounce in Asian shares, but then nervousnes­s will creep into the markets as the day progresses,” said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy and chief economist at AMP Capital Investors in Sydney.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.4 percent. Japan’s Nikkei stock index rose 0.22 percent and Australian shares rose 0.54 percent.

US stock futures tacked on 0.1 percent on Friday, following a 0.80 percent increase in the S&P 500 on Wall Street overnight on hopes that future Fed rate cuts will support corporate profits.

“The bounce on Wall Street is not a definitive sign. It’s actually pessimisti­c for stocks that two-year yields are falling this much. It shows the bond market hasn’t gotten on board with this positive growth story,” AMP’s Oliver said.

That sentiment was underscore­d by a frail performanc­e for world stocks in recent weeks, hurt by political uncertaint­y in the US and Hong Kong, geopolitic­al tensions in the Middle East, Brexit and a drumroll of weak global data.

In Asia, excluding Japan, equities were on course for the third weekly decline, their worst performanc­e since four weeks of declines ended Aug. 16.

Japan’s Nikkei was down 2.3 percent for the week, on course for its biggest weekly decline since Aug. 2, pressured by worries about trade friction and a resurgent yen.

Hong Kong shares were down 0.4 percent and though they are on track for a 0.17 percent weekly gain, sentiment is fragile as the territory’s government mulls emergency laws to contain months of often violent protest against China’s rule of the former British colony.

US Treasury prices fell slightly but two-year yields remained near the lowest in two years due to growing signs the US is feeling an economic chill from its trade war with China.

The dollar traded near a one-month low versus the yen, while it was stuck near a one-week trough versus the euro as traders increased bets that the Fed will have to cut rates further to keep growth in the US economy on track.

Data due later on Friday are forecast to show the US economy added 145,000 new jobs in September, more than an increase of 130,000 in the previous month.

However, some traders are braced for a disappoint­ing result after the surprising­ly soft data earlier this week on US manufactur­ing, job creation, and the services sector.

The two-year yield, which tracks expectatio­ns for US monetary policy, rose slightly to 1.3956 percent in Asia but was still close to a two-year low of 1.3680 percent.

Traders see a 85.2 percent chance the Fed will cut rates by 25 basis points to 1.75 to two percent in October, up from 39.6 percent on Monday, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

The Fed has already cut rates twice this year as policymake­rs try to limit the damage caused by the bruising Sino-US trade war.

The dollar edged down to 106.81 yen, close to a one-month low of 106.48 yen reached on Thursday. The euro was a shade higher at $1.0974, near a one-week high.

For the week, the dollar was down 1.0 percent versus the yen and off 0.3 percent against the common currency.

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