Asian Stocks Continue World Rebound Amid Oil Rev
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Asian Stocks Continue World Rebound Amid Oil Revival; Yen Rises
Emma O'Brien
ek_obrien
Jonathan Burgos
January 24, 2016 — 5:31 PM EST
Updated on January 24, 2016 — 8:08 PM EST
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Equities from Japan to Australia climbed as the rebound that sent global stocks surging by the most in 3 1/2 years continued in Asia, amid bets central banks will come to the rescue of turbulent financial markets. Oil extended gains above $32 a barrel.
Rallies across the board in Asia saw the MSCI All-Country World Index embark on a third day of increases, after a 2 percent jump in U.S. shares on Friday contributed to the gauge’s best day since June 2012. The Korean won strengthened a second day, even as the yen rose from a two-week low in the wake of Japanese trade data. U.S. crude oil climbed to $32.44 following its steepest two-day advance since 2008, while gold held onto declines.
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi gave markets the lift they needed amid the worst start to a year on record for stocks around the world. His indication that stimulus could be boosted as soon as March, coupled with speculation China could ease policy further to soothe investors, fueled a surge across risk-asset classes at the end of last week, aided by the recovery in crude oil prices. While Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda played down the impact of the recent gyrations on his economy, economists are predicting the Federal Reserve will hold fire on interest rates when it meets this week.
“There will be some waiting and seeing among policy makers until they know how this market volatility will affect the global economy,” Michael McCarthy, chief strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney, said by phone. “Given the depression in the markets, there’s scope for the market to add to Friday’s gains. We’ve got a very eventful week, with the BOJ and Fed meetings, so there’s a lot for investors to react to. Volatility is likely to continue.”
Singapore reports on consumer prices Monday, while Malaysian markets are closed for a holiday.
Stocks
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.5 percent as of 10:04 a.m. Tokyo time, after a 3.5 percent surge on Friday trimmed its third straight weekly drop to 1.4 percent. Despite the slight comeback in the yen, Japanese shares rose a second day, with the Topix index increasing 0.7 percent to be set for its highest close since Jan. 19.
Energy producers and banks drove Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index up 1.1 percent amid the revival in crude oil, while New Zealand’s S&P/NZX 50 Index rose 0.7 percent. The Kospi index in Seoul also gained 0.7 percent.
In Hong Kong, futures on the Hang Seng and Hang Seng China Enterprises indexes added at least 1.3 percent at the end of last week. FTSE China A50 Index futures rose 0.9 percent in Singapore, following a 1.4 percent increase in the biggest U.S. exchange-traded fund tracking Chinese stocks. The Shanghai Composite Index ended Friday up 1.3 percent as China’s government signaled it will curb overcapacity in industries such as coal that have been dragging down economic growth.
Less certain is the longer-term outlook for risk assets globally, according to Philip Borkin, a senior economist in Auckland at ANZ Bank New Zealand Ltd.
“One of my colleagues put it quite aptly recently when he stated that financial markets were almost like a tantruming toddler, and that central banks have been attempting to console them by rewarding them with another toy,” Borkin said in a client note Monday. “Any parent would tell you that that is hardly the way to encourage long-lasting good behavior. At some stage, particularly if real activity data are still hanging in there OK, some tough love is required.”
The rebound in crude -- which saw Brent end Friday up more than 10 percent -- stoked gains in Middle Eastern stocks Sunday, with Dubai’s DFM General Index climbing the most in more than a year and Saudi Arabia’s benchmark soaring as much as 6.8 percent. Crude remains the biggest source of revenue for the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council. In Russia, which counts on energy for about 50 percent of budget revenue, the MICEX index jumped 2.4 percent on Friday to its highest level since Jan. 6.
The S&P 500 advanced 2 percent Friday, the most since Dec. 4, to 1,906.90, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average regained 211 points. Futures on the S&P 500 erased early gains to fall 0.2 percent with those on the Dow Average.
Currencies
The won led gains among Asian currencies, climbing 0.3 percent after jumping 1.1 percent on Friday.
New Zealand’s dollar was the worst performer among the majors, retreating 0.4 percent in a second day of losses as investors mulled the outlook for monetary policy. While the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is projected to keep rates on hold at a review Thursday, some economists are predicting further reductions before the end of June.
The yen, which typically moves at odds with Japanese stocks, rallied 0.2 percent to 118.59 per dollar following a 0.9 percent decline Friday that capped its first weekly drop in three weeks.
Governor Kuroda said in an interview with Bloomberg TV in Davos that the turbulence in financial markets hadn’t affected corporate behavior “unduly.” He did, however, emphasize that the central bank is “carefully” watching markets for any potential impact on the real economy.
Data released Monday showed Japan’s annual trade deficit narrowed almost 80 percent in December from a record as the cost of energy imports dipped and weakness in the yen spurred some gains in exports. Economists expect the BOJ to keep stimulus at current levels later this week.
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