TOKYO
(Reuters) - Asian shares hit four-month high on Tuesday after China's
official PMI survey showed manufacturing managed to continue expanding
in March, and dovish comments from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen.
MSCI's
broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose by up to 0.3
percent to reach its highest level since early December.
China's
official Purchasing Managers' Index increased to 50.3 in March from
February's 50.2, in line with economists' forecasts. Above 50 indicates
expansion, below 50 signifies contraction.
While the PMI figure
alone is unlikely to dispel concerns of a slowdown in China, investor
sentiment has improved on China in recent weeks as they expect Beijing
will adopt a stimulus plan to achieve its growth target.
Shares
were also supported after Fed chair Yellen reinforced the need for
"extraordinary" commitment to support the U.S. economy, seemingly
tempering expectations of a sooner-than-expected start to the rate-hike
cycle.
Yellen gave a strong defense of the Fed's easy-money
policies in her first public speech since becoming Fed chair two months
ago, saying there remains "considerable" slack in the economy and job
market.
"It seems like she expressed her own dovish ideas.
There's nothing really new and the outlook of the Fed's policy has not
changed that much but the markets like her remarks," Makoto Noji, senior
strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.
Emerging markets, which
suffered a sharp selloff earlier this year on concerns about a turn in
Fed policy, slowdown in China and political instability in some
countries, appeared to have regained some stability.
MSCI
emerging market index (.MSCIEF) hit a three-month high on Monday, having
outperformed S&P 500 since late March. Among them, Brazilian shares
hit four-month high (.BVSP).
Rising risk appetite undermined
low-return assets that had attracted safety bids last month at the
height of the Ukrainian crisis.
Gold hit a seven-week low of
$1,282.04 per ounce on Monday, despite Yellen's dovish comments while
the yen also slipped to a three-week low against the dollar of 103.44
yen and a nine-month low against the risk-sensitive Australian dollar at
95.75.
The euro bounced back against the U.S. dollar to fetch
$1.3773 even as softer-than-forecast inflation numbers put more pressure
on the European Central Bank to act against the threat of deflation.
Euro
zone inflation dropped to 0.5 percent in March, its lowest level since
November 2009, having been in the ECB's "danger zone" of below 1 percent
for six consecutive months.
However, not many market players
expect the ECB to act at its policy meeting on Thursday, partly because
of comments from ECB council member and Bundesbank President Jens
Weidmann on Saturday.
Weidmann said that the euro zone is not in a
deflationary cycle and that the ECB should not over-react to a slowdown
in inflation caused largely by cyclical factors which should prove
temporary.
Crude futures were off three-week highs following news
Russia was withdrawing some troops on the Ukrainian border. U.S. crude
futures stood at $101.41, off Friday's high of $102.24.
(Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Eric Meijer)
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