The Borneo Post

Asia stocks, Mexico peso bounce as markets score one for Clinton

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SYDNEY: Asian shares recovered from an early bout of nerves while the Mexican peso surged yesterday as investors awarded the first US presidenti­al debate to Democrat Hillary Clinton over Republican Donald Trump.

Markets have tended to see Clinton as the candidate of the status quo, while few are sure what a Trump presidency might mean for US foreign policy, internatio­nal trade deals or the domestic economy.

Opinion polls have shown the two candidates in a very tight race, with the latest Reuters/Ipsos polling showing Clinton ahead by 4 percentage points, with 41 per cent of likely voters.

EMini futures for the S&P 500 recovered to gain 0.6 per cent, an unusually energetic move for Asian hours.

The reaction in Europe was much the same, with euro STOXX 50 futures up 0.7 per cent.

As early risk aversion faded, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan recouped early losses to rise 0.6 per cent.

Japan’s Nikkei swung 0.8 per cent higher, having been down 1.5 per cent at one stage.

The US dollar rebounded to 100.83 yen from a one-month low around 100.08.

“Markets started to call the debate for Hillary within the first 15 minutes or so, with the Mexican peso surging in what is probably its busiest Asian session in years,” said Sean Callow, a senior currency analyst at Westpac in Sydney.

“The bounce in S& P futures, AUD and USD/JPY all show that investors were watching closely and didn’t hesitate to declare Trump the loser.”

The dollar sank 1.7 per cent on the peso, lifting the peso from an all-time trough hit in recent days on concerns that a Trump presidency would threaten Mexico’s exports to the United States, its single biggest market.

“There’s a thing called ‘ Trump thermomete­r’,” said David Bloom, London-based global head of forex strategy at HSBC.

“If you want to know who won the presidenti­al debate, don’t go to Twitter or Facebook. Just look at the dollar/Mexico peso.”

Much the same goes for the Canadian dollar, which touched its lowest since March in early trade before rallying to US$1.3171 on its US counterpar­t.

Against a basket of currencies, the dollar was a fraction firmer at 96.3677 and the euro was steady at US$1.1242.

Other safe-havens ebbed, with yields on US 10-year Treasuries rising a basis point to 1.60 per cent. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Employees of a foreign exchange trading company work near monitors displaying first US presidenti­al debate between US Republican nominee Donald Trump and Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton, and the Japanese yen’s exchange rate against the...
Employees of a foreign exchange trading company work near monitors displaying first US presidenti­al debate between US Republican nominee Donald Trump and Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton, and the Japanese yen’s exchange rate against the...

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