The Manila Times

Markets gain but further volatility seen

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HONG KONG: Most major Asian markets rose on Thursday following the week’s sharp losses but traders in a volatile February, spooked by heavy selling and warnings of more upheaval to come.

After a run of almost uninterrup­ted gains across the globe fuelled by cheap money and optimism about the economy, traders are having to navigate turbulent waters as central banks — led by the Federal Reserve — look to lift borrowing costs.

Last Friday’s strong US jobs and wage growth data, coupled with rising yields on key US Treasury bills, brought an end to the recordsett­ing global rally, sending Wall Street spiralling down before slamming world markets this week.

Asia took the biggest hit on Tuesday, with Hong Kong and Tokyo among the worst affected but others also felt the pinch.

And investors have been unable to steady the ship with a rebound on Wednesday running out of steam.

On Thursday there were more swings, though most markets stayed in the green.

Tokyo ended 1.1 percent higher while Hong Kong was 0.4 percent up having fallen around eight per

Sydney was 0.2 percent higher while Seoul and Singapore each gained 0.5 percent. Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok also advanced.

However, Shanghai tumbled 1.4 percent despite data showing Chinese imports smashed expectatio­ns and exports were supported by strong global demand.

Wellington, Taipei, Manila and Mumbai all fell.

Wall Street’s three main indexes sank into the red, while in early European trade markets that saw strong gains on Wednesday reversed at the open. London fell 0.8 percent, Paris slipped 0.5 percent and Frankfurt lost 0.7 percent.

‘False sense of security’

“There are a lot of risks ahead and we’ve been lulled into a false sense of security over the last couple of years with central banks keeping rates low for a very long time,” Steve Goldman, Kapstream Capital head and portfolio manager, told Bloomberg TV.

“Risk assets are going to continue to perform well albeit with a lot more volatility than what we’ve seen in the past.”

Expectatio­ns the Fed will hike interest rates more than the three times expected this year have lifted the dollar against high-yielding currencies including the Australian dollar, South Korean won, Indonesian rupiah and South African rand.

However, with the European Central Bank tipped to be close to winding in its crisis-era stimulus, the euro has strengthen­ed, while the pound is also being supported by hopes for a positive outcome for Britain’s exit from the EU.

The greenback also climbed against the yen, which is considered a safe bet in times of uncertaint­y, having seen a sharp fall earlier in the day.

Oil prices extended Wednesday’s sharp sell-off on concerns about increasing US production, offsetting an output cap by OPEC and Russia.

The dollar’s strength against high-yielding units was also putting a dampener on the oil market

as it makes the commodity more expensive for clients using those currencies.

“It’s the deluge US production menace to OPEC production cuts. The bottom line is the US crude production should keep hitting new highs throughout 2018,” said trading at OANDA.

The drop in crude prices again PetroChina and Sinopec diving in Hong Kong, and Woodside Petroleum sharply lower in Tokyo.

 ??  ?? An Indian man drinks in front of an advertisem­ent for investment­s at a bus stop in Mumbai on February 8, 2018. Traders are struggling to get a firm footing in a volatile February, spooked by heavy selling and warnings of more upheaval to come.
An Indian man drinks in front of an advertisem­ent for investment­s at a bus stop in Mumbai on February 8, 2018. Traders are struggling to get a firm footing in a volatile February, spooked by heavy selling and warnings of more upheaval to come.

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