The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Asian stocks rise after big gains on Wall Street

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ASIAN stocks were up on Friday, tracking big gains on Wall Street fuelled by strong tech earnings and mixed, but manageable, macroecono­mic data.

Fears of further turmoil in the banking sector, which had acted as a drag on global markets, also appeared to be dissipatin­g as shares in troubled US lender First National Bank rose after two battering sessions.

Hong Kong was up nearly one percent in early trade Friday on the back of solid gains by Chinese tech giant Tencent and strong performanc­es by commerce and industry stocks.

Tokyo also posted solid gains as investors kept their eyes on the Bank of Japan (BoJ), which will conclude its first meeting under new governor Kazuo Ueda during Tokyo trading hours.

“The BoJ is widely expected to hold firm,” given that Ueda “defended the Bank’s current ultra- easy policy stance in front of Parliament earlier this week,” National Australia Bank senior analyst Taylor Nugent said in a note.

Traders will be also watching the BoJ’s inflation forecasts, which will be released at the same time, he added.

Shanghai, Seoul, Sydney, Taipei, Wellington, Manila and Kuala Lumpur were all up, with Jakarta the sole loser. Singapore was more or less flat.

Back on Wall Street, a 14 percent surge in Meta shares - along with strong performanc­es by fellow tech titans Microsoft and Alphabet earlier in the week - “helped foster a sense of relief that the mega- cap leaders are still performing relatively well from an operationa­l standpoint”, said Briefing. com.

Meanwhile, fresh US macroecono­mic data was a mixed bag: though growth slowed more than expected in the first quarter, resilient employment and a bounceback in personal consumptio­n offered a silver lining, pumping the brakes on recession fears.

“The consumer is still in too good of shape for the recession to start in the second quarter,” Oanda’s Edward Moya said in a note.

“GDP growth is about to flatline, but it might squeeze out a tiny gain this quarter.”

Investors were also heartened by the performanc­e of US regional banks, which had been at the centre of fears for the health of the sector.

After two straight routs, First Republic Bank -- which reported this week that it lost more than US$ 100 billion in deposits in the first quarter -- mustered an 8.8 percent gain, while other regional banks also closed higher.

Art Hogan, an analyst at B. Riley Financial, said “the worst of the regional bank turmoil is likely in the rear mirror”, noting that most US lenders released earnings that were reassuring.

“It doesn’t feel like the market is expecting some contagion.” With markets having digested the busiest stretch of earnings, the focus turns next to the US Federal Reserve’s monetary policy meeting next week.

Yields on US government debt rose after the US data was released, suggesting that the market expects the Fed to consider strong consumer spending in the first quarter as well as a drop in weekly jobless claims on Thursday as evidence that the economy can take more interest rate hikes.

 ?? ?? Fears of further turmoil in the banking sector,which had acted as a drag on global markets, also appeared to be dissipatin­g as shares in troubled US lender First National Bank rose after two battering sessions
Fears of further turmoil in the banking sector,which had acted as a drag on global markets, also appeared to be dissipatin­g as shares in troubled US lender First National Bank rose after two battering sessions

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