The Freeman

Asia markets rally as Fed rate rise seen delayed

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An increasing expectatio­n the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates at record lows fed further gains in Asia's stock markets on Friday.

Investors were set to end a third straight week on a high as Tuesday and Wednesday's Chinafuell­ed retreat was overshadow­ed by hopes the cost of US borrowing will stay near zero percent into the new year.

Speculatio­n that Beijing will soon introduce more measures to stimulate the world's number two economy and key driver of world growth also provided an incentive to buy ahead of the release of growth data next week.

Global markets have enjoyed a broadly strong month so far after suffering their worst quarter in four years during July-September, when trillions of dollars were wiped of valuations.

The main story behind the latest rally has been the likelihood the Fed will have to put off a rate hike until the new year owing to a slowdown in world economic growth.

After saying in early 2015 that a rise was expected as the US economy picked up pace, bank policymake­rs have gradually lowered their expectatio­ns, with turmoil unleashed by China's yuan depreciati­on in August playing a major role.

A recent run of weak data out of Washington -- including below par jobs growth and retail sales -- have also muddied the Fed's waters.

"Investors are reacting to the increasing likelihood that the Fed rate hike, which had been expected just a month ago in September, now likely won't happen during the course of this year," said David Levy, portfolio manager at Kenjol Capital Management.

However, the dollar, which has tumbled this month against most currencies, picked up Friday after NewYork Federal Reserve President William Dudley said a rate increase was still possible this year if economic data stayed "in line" with forecasts.

China growth woes

Indonesia's rupiah dipped 0.50 percent in early trade Friday, while the Malaysian ringgit lost one percent.

The rupiah is up about eight percent this month, while the ringgit has gained more than five percent. The Korean won was 0.39 percent lower, the Thai baht eased 0.22 percent and Singapore's dollar was down 0.13percent.

The greenback rose to 119.18 yen from 118.88 yen in New York as pick-up in confidence on trading floors saw dealers move out of safer assets.

The euro was at $1.1369 compared with $1.1376 in US trade and well down from $1.1480 earlier Thursday in Asia with after a European Central Bank board member said eurozone inflation was undershoot­ing its target.

The comments led the speculatio­n the ECB will widen its already huge stimulus program.

On share markets, expectatio­ns the Bank of Japan will soon increase its own monetary easing scheme helped the Nikkei to close the morning session 1.36 percent higher.

Hong Kong added 0.79 percent and Sydney gained 0.89 percent.

Shanghai was 1.20 percent higher, with dealers betting on China's leaders announcing a new round of measures to shore up the stuttering economy.

While weak readings this week on trade and inflation initially sent stocks lower, investors now see the possibilit­y of another interest rate cut -- after five since November -- or other monetary loosening.

This week the government announced plans to reform the country's sprawling state-owned enterprise­s in the telecoms and utilities sectors as it looks to improve efficiency.

"The central bank has loosened its tap on liquidity and the SOE reform will continue through the year," said Wei Wei, an analyst at Huaxi Securities Co. in Shanghai. "It’s a good time window for stocks now and the rebound will probably carry on."

However, analysts are pessimisti­c about the release of July-September economic growth figures Monday, with a survey.

A survey of 19 economists by AFP found a median forecast of expansion of 6.8 percent, which would be the worst since early 2009 at the height of the global financial crisis.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? Investors were set to end a third straight week on a high as Tuesday and Wednesday's Chinafuell­ed retreat was overshadow­ed by hopes the cost of US borrowing will stay near zero percent into the new year.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE Investors were set to end a third straight week on a high as Tuesday and Wednesday's Chinafuell­ed retreat was overshadow­ed by hopes the cost of US borrowing will stay near zero percent into the new year.

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