The Manila Times

Most Asian markets rise as 2018 rally extends

- AFP

HONG KONG: The equity rally that has kicked off 2018 continued on Friday, with Asian markets picking up the baton from another set of records on Wall Street.

Dealers are now turning their attention to the release later in the day of key US jobs data, which is expected to show the world’s top economy continuing to improve.

A forecast-smashing reading Thursday on private take-ups boosted optimism, which had already been bolstered by US tax cuts, healthy corporate profits and strong manufactur­ing figures from around the world.

Global markets powered ahead in 2017 as economies showed long-running improvemen­ts after years of faltering.

Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrader, said in a note that data from the manufactur­ing and services sectors “suggests economic strength across the globe remains robust”.

He noted that an index of world factory activity was at its highest level in seven years.

On Wall Street, the Dow ended above 25,000 for the first time, leading records across Wall Street.

In Tokyo, the Nikkei ended up 0.9 percent at a 26year high following its more than three percent jump Thursday, while Sydney added 0.7 percent.

Seoul rose 1.3 percent, with dealers buoyed by news that North Korea had accepted the South’s offer of talks next week, further easing geopolitic­al tensions in the region.

Hong Kong gained 0.3 percent to chalk up a ninth- straight gain, while Shanghai closed 0.2 percent higher but Singapore eased 0.2 percent.

Pause in oil?

While oil prices inched down in Asia, they remain elevated after recent rises to around three-year highs thanks to Middle East tensions, while the US sees stockpiles fall as it is hit by a severe cold snap.

The latest gains have given impetus to petroleuml­inked firms, sending them rallying this week. In Hong Kong, Sinopec was up more than one percent while CNOOC and PetroChina were also higher. Woodside Petroleum in Sydney was up along with Santos, though Tokyo-listed Inpex eased.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines