Asian shares seen rising, weak data pressures euro
Euro off two-week lows vs dollar, capped as rate cut eyed; MSCI Asia ex-Japan likely track US stocks higher
Tokyo: Asian shares are set to track global
equities higher on Wednesday, but the euro remained under pressure
despite a modest recovery after soft German data underscored the
still-fragile state of the euro zone economy.
After the bell on Wall Street, Apple shares rose 3.8%
after the company reported better-than-expected second-quarter revenue
of $43.6 billion, reflecting strong sales of the iPad and iPhone.
According to Westpack bank, 72.8% of the 147 Standard & Poor’s 500 companies reporting so far beat consensus on earnings.
“Equities were underpinned by positive reports on
corporate earnings and US housing, some indications of progress in the
Italian political arena, and perceptions that economic weakness in
Europe may promote a further easing of monetary policy by the European
Central Bank,” Barclays Capital said in a research.
The euro was around $1.3000, managing to recover from
Tuesday’s two-week low of $1.2973 hit after a survey showed Germany, the
euro zone’s largest economy, saw business activity decline in April for
the first time in five months. Traders saw it as strengthening the case
for the European Central Bank to cut interest rates.
The upside for the single currency was limited given the
potential for an ECB rate cut and lingering concerns about the growth
outlook in the recession-hit euro-zone.
In Asia, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares
outside Japan fell 0.3% on Tuesday after the preliminary or “flash”
China HSBC Purchasing Managers’ Index for April fell to 50.5 from 51.6
in March, as a contraction in new export orders pointed to fragile
global demand.
The pan-Asian index was likely to be supported on Wednesday, with Australian shares seen opening higher.
Japan’s Nikkei stock average is also expected to open
higher in response to the firmness in US equities, as well as a pause in
the yen’s firmness.
The dollar was down 0.1% at ¥99.41, struggling to break
above the key ¥100 mark due to weak US economic reports, but traders say
the upcoming Bank of Japan meeting on Friday may provide an opportunity
to clear that symbolic level.
US stocks rallied on Tuesday, recovering from sharp
declines sparked by a “bogus” Associated Press tweet about explosions at
the White House, shrugging off data showing US manufacturing grew at
its most sluggish pace in six months.
European shares posted their biggest one-day gain in seven months.
Earlier in the Asian session on Wednesday, New Zealand’s
central bank held its benchmark interest rate at a record low 2.5% for
the 17th straight review, reaffirming it expects to be on hold for the
rest of the year as the economy picks up and inflation remains tame.
US crude futures were up 0.3% at $89.44 a barrel early on Wednesday.
Touhid Hussain
PGDM 2 nd SEM
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