The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Asia shares, Europe futures up

- Bloomberg.

ASIAN stocks advanced for a sixth-straight day last Friday and Europe equity futures climbed as a surge in US tech shares and China’s reopening helped investors shrug off mixed data on the American economy.

The moves are set to extend the weekly run of gains for the MSCI Asia Pacific Index to five as it heads for the highest close since April.

Hong Kong-listed technology stocks were among the regional leaders on Friday, as they have been since around October.

A report that Japan and the Netherland­s are poised to join the US in limiting China’s access to advanced semiconduc­tor machinery tempered the climb, pulling stocks off their intraday highs. Mainland China remains closed for the Lunar New Year holiday.

Investors are also focused on stocks linked to Indian billionair­e Gautam Adani, with the companies expected to provide a detailed response to a short seller’s report that they labelled as “bogus.”

In the meantime, shares of Adani Group’s companies plunged, extending a selloff that began when the report was published.

Flagship firm Adani Enterprise­s Ltd dropped as much as 6,4 percent, while Adani Green Energy Ltd and Adani Transmissi­on Ltd fell more than 15 percent.

The group’s rout pushed India’s NSE Nifty 50 Index to slide 1 percent, on course for the lowest since October.

Treasuries declined in Asia and Australian bonds slid, with the nation’s 10-year yields rising more than five basis points. The dollar turned slightly stronger against most Group-of-10 currencies.

The yen rose after Tokyo inflation exceeded estimates and rose to the highest level since 1981.

Quickly rising prices will add pressure on the Bank of Japan to scale back its stimulus after it redoubled its efforts to depress bond yields earlier this month.

Japan’s 10-year bond yield climbed 1,5 basis point, to 0,475 percent, as it edges toward the BOJ’s new ceiling of 0,5 percent.

“The latest Tokyo inflation report underscore­s rising price pressure and that could continue to drive speculatio­n of another monetary policy adjustment by the Bank of Japan and further Japanese yen strength,” said Fiona Lim, senior currency analyst at Malayan Banking Bhd in Singapore.

Asia’s developmen­ts followed mixed US economic data Thursday, with gross domestic product rising at a faster-than-forecast pace in the December quarter, but accompanie­d by signs of slowing underlying demand as rate hikes crimp growth.

A surprise drop in initial jobless claims also pointed to resilience in the labour market.

Quarz Capital Asia Singapore Pte sees increasing signs that price pressures have already peaked in the US. “Inflation will most probably slow down to 3 percent, 3,5 percent in the second half of this year,” Havard Chi, head of research at the firm, said on Bloomberg Television.

Labour data will provide “the slack that basically the Fed needs to start holding and also reducing rate in the second half of the year. This will have quite a positive impact on Asian equities,” he said.

The S&P 500 managed to close at the highest level in more than a month on Thursday, reflecting the jump in tech stocks.

The Nasdaq 100 rose 2 percent to the highest level since September, led by an 11 percent gain for Tesla as Elon Musk teased potential for the carmaker to produce 2 million vehicles this year.

US futures went a different direction during Asian trading, in part reflecting Intel Corp late in the day giving of the gloomiest quarterly forecasts in its history after a personal-computer slump ravaged its business. Intel tumbled in late trading.

Elsewhere in markets, oil rose on the back of optimism over Chinese demand. —

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