Business World

Asian bourses on cautious start as virus cases spike

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SYDNEY — Asian shares got the week off to a cautious start on Monday, with Chinese markets holding steady, as a spike in coronaviru­s cases across the region over the weekend hurt investor sentiment while oil hovered around 2-1/2 year highs.

MSCI’s broadest index of AsiaPacifi­c shares outside Japan was last a shade weaker at 702.57. Australian shares slipped 0.2%. South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI was barely changed as was Japan’s Nikkei.

Investors were concerned about a spike in coronaviru­s infections in Asia with Australia’s most populous city of Sydney plunging into a lockdown after a cluster of cases involving the highly contagious Delta strain ballooned.

Indonesia is battling record high cases while a lockdown in Malaysia is set to be extended. Thailand too announced new restrictio­ns in Bangkok and other provinces.

Chinese shares were a touch higher with the CSI300 index 0.2%. Data over the weekend showed profit growth at China’s industrial firms slowed again in May as surging raw material prices squeezed margins and weighed on factory activity.

Investors will keep a close eye on official factory activity from China due on Wednesday. The manufactur­ing reading is expected to slow to 50.7 from 51. The private sector Caixin Manufactur­ing PMI will follow later in the week.

Last week, global shares reached record highs as weakerthan-expected US inflation and news of a bipartisan US infrastruc­ture agreement boosted risk appetite.

The infrastruc­ture plan is valued at $1.2 trillion over eight years, of which $579 billion is new spending.

“Investors are keenly watching the progress of US President Biden’s bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal through congress. The package could boost demand significan­tly, driven by investment in renewables and electronic vehicle (EV) infrastruc­ture,” ANZ analysts wrote in a note.

Oil prices climbed to their highest since October 2018 in early Asian trading on expectatio­ns demand growth will outstrip supply and OPEC+ will be cautious in returning more crude to the market from August.

Brent futures rose 12 cents to $76.30 a barrel, while US crude added 13 cents to $74.18.

On Friday, the S&P 500 rose 2.7% for the week, its strongest weekly gain since early February after data showed a measure of underlying inflation rose less than expected in May, easing fears of a sudden tapering in stimulus by the Federal Reserve.

The Dow climbed 0.7% while the tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped 0.06% after holding near the previous session’s record high.

Later in the week, a closelywat­ched US jobs report will be released for June which could point to strong labor demand. Yields for benchmark 10-year US Treasuries, jumped back above 1.50% to close out a week in which rates notched their largest gains since March.

Monetary and fiscal stimulus around the world in response to the COVID-19 pandemic is boosting financial assets, despite an uneven pace of recovery between regions.

Boston Federal Reserve Bank President Eric Rosengren on Friday warned a buildup of financial stability risks linked to a low interest rate environmen­t could lead to another downturn that interrupts the labor market recovery and impedes a return to maximum employment.

In currencies, the US dollar was slightly firmer at 91.846 against a basket of other currencies.

The Japanese yen weakened to 110.65 versus the greenback and the euro eased to $1.1925.

An appreciati­ng dollar took some luster off gold with prices prices down 0.4% at $1,771.9 an ounce.

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