The Mercury

Emerging markets start week on a high

- Reuters

EMERGING markets started the week on a high yesterday, with stocks at a two-year peak, the rouble, rand and lira up for a fourth consecutiv­e session and hard-currency bonds at their strongest since late 2014.

The rally came thanks to an oil-led charge in commodity markets, as well as weakness in the dollar after lacklustre economic data on Friday cooled growing expectatio­ns of a rapid-fire run of US interest rate hikes.

Russia’s rouble jumped almost 1percent to under 56.5 a dollar as the Russian and Saudi energy ministers said oil production cuts would be extended, catapultin­g Brent and West Texas Intermedia­te prices higher.

Index climbs

Russian shares led the pack with a rise of more than 1.2 percent after climbs across much of Asia had lifted MSCI’s 23-country Emerging Markets Index to its highest since May 2015 and put it on track for a sixth day of gains for the first time since August.

“The news that there’s been a consensus on extending the Opec cuts has provided some support to oil prices and some of the oil currencies such as the rouble,” Capital Economics’ senior emerging markets economist, William Jackson, said.

“Maybe that has spread to a more general improvemen­t in sentiment towards emerging markets.”

There was little impact, meanwhile, from weaker-than-expected Chinese data, where factory output and fixed asset investment growth cooled in April after a strong first quarter.

The yuan edged marginally lower, but shares in Shanghai ended up 0.4 percent, steadying after falling almost 6 percent since early April.

Elsewhere, Pakistan shares hit their latest record high, and South Korean stocks shrugged off a fresh missile test in North Korea to finish 0.2 percent higher and just below their all-time peak.

India’s rupee climbed 0.3 percent on news that consumer inflation eased in April to its lowest in at least five years.

The country’s improving inflation performanc­e has pushed real interest rates – the amount by which they exceed inflation – strongly into positive territory. That has attracted buyers to the bond market and driven stocks to double-digit percentage gains this year. Ten-year yields slipped to a onemonth low.

Inflows

Morgan Stanley investment flow data published yesterday underscore­d the current fashion for emerging-market assets. The dedicated emergingma­rket funds that it tracks reported inflows of $2.32 billion (R30.5bn) over the past week, the eighth consecutiv­e week of positive momentum, its figures showed. – Reuters

 ??  ?? The Opec logo at its headquarte­rs in Vienna. News that Opec will extend production cuts has provided some support to some oil currencies.
The Opec logo at its headquarte­rs in Vienna. News that Opec will extend production cuts has provided some support to some oil currencies.

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