Asian shares
rallied on Thursday, taking their cue from Wall Street, after the Federal
Reserve left U.S. interest rates unchanged and slowed the pace of future hikes,
knocking the dollar and lifting commodity prices.
European
markets are likely to follow suit, with financial spreadbetters predicting
Britain’s FTSE 100 .FTSE will
open up as much as 0.6 percent, and Germany’s DAX .GDAXI and
France’s CAC 40.FCHI will
start the day about 0.8 percent higher.
MSCI's
broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS extended
gains to 1.2 percent in its sixth straight session of increases, just 0.9
percent shy of its one-year high touched earlier this month.
China's CSI
300 index .CSI300 jumped
0.9 percent, and the Shanghai Composite .SSEC moved
up 0.7 percent. Hong Kong's Hang Seng .HSI climbed
0.4 percent.
Asia's
strong gains follow surges of 1.1 percent for the S&P 500 .SPX,
0.9 percent for the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI and
1.3 percent for the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC,
which closed at a record high.
"The
market got what it expected/wanted," said Daniel Morris, senior investment
strategist at BNP Paribas Investment Partners in London. "Another dose of
central bank support for markets following the Bank of Japan meeting."
While Tokyo
is on holiday on Thursday, stocks .N225 closed
up 1.9 percent on Wednesday after the BOJ's shift to targeting a positive yield
curve, a move that was considered bullish for banks, insurers and pension
funds.
But
"Japan equities may lag as the bank relief rally runs its course and the
yen is strengthening," BNP Paribas's Morris said. "Japan needed a Fed
hike in order to push the yen down."
The Fed did
signal it could hike rates by year-end as the labor market improved further,
but cut the number of rate increases expected in 2017 and 2018. It also reduced
its longer-run interest rate forecast to 2.9 percent from 3 percent.
That left
investors feeling any tightening would be glacial at best. Market pricing for a
December move rose only a fraction to 59.3 percent <0#FF:>, from 59.2
percent, according to CME Group's FedWatch tool.
Richard Franulovich,
an analyst at Westpac, noted that back in June the median dot plot showed five
hikes to end-2017. Now it is down to just three.
"We do
not feel that the dollar has the wherewithal to make a more concerted run
higher in the next few weeks," he added. "The FOMC is unlikely to
deliver anything more than a very 'dovish' December hike."
The dollar
rose as high as 102.755 yen after the BOJ's announcement on Thursday, but the
yen took back its lost ground after the BOJ's announcement left some unimpressed
and following the Fed's less-hawkish statement.
"Fundamentally,
(the BOJ decision) did not amount to an easing of monetary policy, but merely
offers policy tweaks at the margin and a strengthening of forward
guidance," said Frederic Neumann, co-head of economic research at HSBC in
Hong Kong.
"The
BOJ now essentially promises to purchase JGBs for even longer, until inflation
exceeds, and not merely meets, its 2 percent inflation target."
The
greenback slipped 0.1 percent to 100.25 yen JPY=,
having already weakened 1.4 percent on Wednesday to touch a 3-1/2 week low of
100.34.
The dollar index .DXY, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major peers, slipped 0.3 percent to $95.386. It touched a six-week high of 96.333 on Wednesday, before ending the day down 0.4 percent from its previous close.
The euro EUR=EBS rose
0.2 percent to $1.1204, after gaining 0.3 percent on Wednesday.
CENTRAL
BANKS STILL TRYING
Another
central bank struggling with too-low inflation is the Reserve Bank of New
Zealand, which held rates steady on Thursday but renewed a pledge to cut again
even as much of the domestic economy grows briskly.
The RBNZ's
blunt statement that further easing would be needed knocked the local dollar
down 0.2 percent to $0.7334 NZD=,
but the market has found it hard to sell a currency that still offers an
overnight interest rate of 2 percent.
The
Australian dollar AUD= edged
up 0.25 percent to an almost two-week high of $0.7641 after Reserve Bank of
Australia Governor Philip Lowe said interest rate cuts and a weaker currency
are helping the economy, and that it was "not particularly useful" to
keep cutting rates in the hope that it will eventually lift growth.
In commodity
markets, gold traded down 0.3 percent at $1,332.63 an ounce XAU=, having
climbed 1.7 percent as the U.S. dollar declined on Wednesday.
Oil prices
added as much as 3 percent on Wednesday after a third surprise weekly drop in
U.S. crude stockpiles boosted the demand outlook in the world's largest oil
consumer.
Another
supportive factor was an oil workers' strike in Norway, which threatened to cut
North Sea crude output.
U.S. crude
(WTI) futures CLc1 advanced 0.9 percent to $45.75 after soaring 2.9 percent on
Wednesday. Brent crude futures LCOc1 rose 0.8 percent to $47.21, adding to
gains of 2 percent on Wednesday.




0 Comments