Asian stocks steer through Ukraine woes, dollar up
Tokyo: Asian shares shrugged off tensions in the
Ukraine and followed Wall Street higher on Tuesday, while the dollar
held its recent gains against the yen and euro thanks to stronger US
Treasury yields.
Indian shares were expected to rally strongly when markets open
later in the day, boosted by exit polls predicting India’s
business-friendly opposition party winning in the world’s biggest ever
elections.
Indian-based assets in global markets surged on Monday
after the exit polls, including the 1-month rupee NDF and US-listed
shares of Indian banks such as ICICI Bank Ltd.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan advanced 0.4% and Tokyo’s Nikkei gained 1.9%.
The Dow and S&P 500 hit record closing highs on
Monday, as strong corporate results and an improving economic outlook
spurred a broad rally on Wall Street.
Equity markets have so far brushed off a weekend
referendum in Ukraine, where pro-Moscow rebel organizers said nearly 90%
had voted in favour of self-rule, possibly inflaming the conflict.
“Investors are so far taking (Russian President Vladimir Putin)
at his word that eastern Ukraine will not be repeat performance of
Crimea and don’t seem too concerned about the next round of US-EU
sanctions given the weakness of those offered to date,” Jasper Lawler, market analyst at CMC Markets, wrote in a note to clients.
“With Donetsk now officially asking to join Russia, Putin’s diplomacy will be fully put to the test,” Lawler added.
The markets are also likely to be focused on industrial
production and retail sales data from China expected later on Tuesday.
Weak readings could depress risk-sentiment, though they may also fuel
expectations for further stimulus measures from Beijing.
China’s economy is growing at its slowest pace in
decades, with recent data suggesting a challenging outlook over the next
year.
The dollar brushed a one-week high of ¥102.22, helped by
higher US Treasury yields on investor caution ahead of a slew of data
this week that could paint a brighter economic picture.
The euro remained on the defensive at $1.3755, stuck
close to a one-month low of $1.3745 hit on Friday after European Central
Bank president Mario Draghi fired a verbal warning against the common currency’s recent gains.
The benchmark 10-year US Treasury note yielded 2.6% after hitting 2.67% on Monday, its highest since 2 May.
The oil market remained a little more sensitive to
tensions in the Ukraine, with US crude trading little changed at $100.55
a barrel after gaining 60 cents on Monday. Reuters
LOVE GUPTA
PGDM 1ST YEAR
No comments:
Post a Comment