The Manila Times

Asian stocks up on trade talks, shutdown deal news

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HONG KONG: Asian stocks advanced Tuesday on optimism over US- China trade talks and a provisiona­l deal to avoid a Washington shutdown, while the weak yen boosted exporters.

Negotiatio­ns are under way in Beijing aimed at averting a planned increase in US tariffs that could slow the global economy.

Top- level officials are set to arrive in the Chinese capital for meetings Thursday and Friday, ahead of a March 1 deal deadline.

Investors responded positively to reports that Donald Trump wants to meet Xi Jinping “very soon”, just days after the US president had appeared to write off an imminent summit with his counterpar­t.

“Officials on both sides of the USChina trade talks expressed satisfacti­on with the progress thus far,” wrote Jeffrey Halley, senior analyst at Oanda, in a commentary.

Washington is demanding changes from Beijing on what it says are unfair commercial practices.

Failure by the economic superpower­s to reach an agreement would see US tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports more than double.

Meanwhile, US lawmakers said they had reached an agreement in principle on border security.

The announceme­nt assuaged fears of a chaotic repeat of the recent 35- day partial US government shutdown -- the longest in the country’s history.

The agreement included $1.4 billion in funding for a wall on the US-Mexico border — a key campaign promise of Trump.

News of the deal — which still needs to be accepted — came as the president stirred up border controvers­y at a raucous rally in the frontier city of El Paso.

Hong Kong edged up 0.1 percent, while Shanghai gained 0.7 percent. Sydney, Seoul and Taipei also rose.

Tokyo — returning from Monday’s public holiday — leapt 2.6 percent, as Japanese exporters further benefited from a resurgent dollar, which left the yen at its weakest level since the start of 2019.

Dollar rises

The dollar has returned to early January heights, on the US currency’s longest unbroken rally in three years — despite the Fed recently changing course on interest rate hikes.

Investors have turned to the greenback as concern has built over poor growth forecasts and the health of other currencies in Europe and beyond.

Multiple central banks have fallen in line with the Fed’s dovish stance since it held interest rates unchanged two weeks ago.

The weak yen saw Tokyo-listed exporters such as Toyota, Honda and Nissan rise.

The British pound clawed back some losses after dropping sharply Monday on dismal monthly GDP and manufactur­ing data, but the euro remained largely unchanged against the dollar.

“The problem for dollar bears is that there is a chronic shortage of currencies to like,” Societe Generale SA strategist Kit Juckes told Bloomberg.

“Lower bund yields, not to mention weak growth, political uncertaint­y and Brexit, make a good set of reasons to hate the euro as much as you hate the dollar.”

In early European trade, London added 0.4 percent, Paris gained 0.8 percent and Frankfurt climbed nearly 1.0 percent.

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