Arab Times

Asian shares rise, echoing Wall St optimism on virus battle

Japan gains 2% while Australia shares sink

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TOKYO, April 7, (AP): Asian shares rose Tuesday, echoing the rally on Wall Street, amid a few glimmers of hope that the coronaviru­s pandemic could be slowing.

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 gained 2.0% to finish at 18,950.18, while South Korea’s Kospi gained 1.9% to 1,825.42. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng added 1.5% to 24,092.69, while the Shanghai Composite jumped nearly 2.0% to 2,818.35.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.7% to 5,252.30. India’s Sensex surged 6.5% to 29,370.82.

China on Tuesday reported no new deaths from the coronarivu­s over the past 24 hours and had 32 new cases, all from people who returned from overseas. The country that gave rise to the global pandemic has recorded 3,331 deaths and 81,740 total cases. Numbers of daily new deaths have been hovering in the single digits for weeks, hitting just one on several occasions.

The number of new coronaviru­s cases is dropping in the European hotspots of Italy and Spain. The center of the U.S. outbreak, New York, also reported its number of daily deaths has been effectivel­y flat for two days. Even though the U.S. is still bracing for a surge of deaths due to COVID-19 and New York’s governor said restrictio­ns should stay in place to slow its spread, the encouragin­g signs were enough to launch the S&P 500 to its best day in nearly two weeks.

“We’re running on raw optimism, maybe that’s the best way to put it,” said Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivative­s at Schwab Center for Financial Research.

Investors have been waiting anxiously for signs that the rate of new infections may be hitting its peak, which would give some clarity about how long the upcoming recession will last and how deep it will be. Without that, markets have been guessing about how long businesses will remain shut down, companies will lay off workers and flights remain canceled due to measures meant to slow the speed of the outbreak.

“The virus is not everything, it’s the only thing, and nothing else really matters” to the markets, Frederick said, particular­ly in a week that is relatively light on economic reports.

The S&P 500 climbed 175.03, or 7%, to 2,663.68, and nearly all the stocks in the index were higher. It more than recovered all its losses from the prior week, when the government reported a record number of layoffs sweeping the economy.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average shot up 1,627.46 points, or 7.7%, to 22,679.99, and the Nasdaq rose 540.15, or 7.3%, to 7,913.24.

The latest gains are not likely to have much staying power, given how much uncertaint­y remains about when the pandemic will subside significan­tly and how much harm will have been inflicted to the economy, said Nela Richardson, investment strategist at Edward Jones.

A man wearing face mask walks past a bank electronic board showing the

Hong Kong share index at Hong Kong Stock Exchange, April 6. (AP)

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