Asian Shares Rise, Led by Tokyo
2016年10月4日 - 12:50PM
Dow Jones News
Asian stock markets were broadly higher early Tuesday, with
Japanese equities leading as solid U.S. manufacturing data helped
weaken the yen.
The Nikkei Stock Average was up 0.8%, Korea's Kospi rose 0.7%
and Singapore's FTSE Straits Times Index gained 0.2%. Chinese
markets are shut for the week. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index,
however, reversed early gains and was down 0.2%.
"We're up based on a weaker yen," said Alex Furber, senior
client services executive at CMC Markets. "We've had some fairly
positive data on the U.S. side last night, and [some market players
believe] this is a case for a rate hike."
The U.S. September purchasing managers' index -- a key measure
of factory activity—jumped to 51.5, shifting back into expansionary
territory, following a surprise dip to 49.4 in August.
The stronger manufacturing numbers sent the yen down 0.5%
against the dollar, as the market's appetite for risk returned.
Japanese exporters benefited, with Honda Motor rising 2.2%, Olympus
adding 4.1% and Panasonic gaining 1.6%.
The data further supported expectations for an interest-rate
increase by the U.S. Federal Reserve at its December meeting.
According to CME Group's Fedwatch tool, the market expects a 62.1%
probability of a change in rates, which was higher than the
previous day.
Elsewhere in Japan, financial stocks rebounded following a
recent selloff due to concerns about slow growth, low interest
rates and the contagion from a troubled European banking sector.
The Topix banking subsector added 2.1%, while among individual
banks, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group gained 2.3% higher and
Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group rose 2%.
In Australia, stocks were retreating from five-week highs ahead
of the Reserve Bank of Australia's decision on interest rates later
Tuesday, the first under new governor Philip Lowe. The S&P/ASX
200 was last down 0.2%, while in New Zealand, the NZX-50 index was
off 0.4%.
Financial stocks in Australia consolidated after gains in the
previous session. Commonwealth Bank of Australia was 0.4% lower and
Westpac Banking Corporation was down 0.3%.
Meanwhile, commodities prices were mostly lower, as a stronger
dollar made the dollar-denominated products more expensive to buy
for those holding other currencies. Brent crude was down 0.6% at
$50.60 a barrel, while gold was down 0.1% at $1,310.92 a troy
ounce.
Among other currencies, the British pound was relatively stable
against the dollar in Asian trade, off 0.1% recently, after
declining 1.1% Monday. The sterling's decline came after U.K. Prime
Minister Theresa May announced she would trigger Article 50 by the
end of March 2017, formally starting the clock on the country's
two-year deadline to exit from the European Union.
Kosaku Narioka and Kenan Machado contributed to this
article.
Write to Ese Erheriene at ese.erheriene@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 03, 2016 23:35 ET (03:35 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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