Asia shares extend bull run, dollar crawls off lows


FE Team | Published: January 29, 2018 09:46:33 | Updated: January 31, 2018 09:11:50


People walk past an electronic stock quotation board outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, September 22, 2017. Reuters/File Photo

Asian shares extended their bull run on Monday amid upbeat corporate earnings and strong global economic growth, while the dollar tried to bounce even as the White House continued to complain of “unfair” trade practices by competitors.

People walk past an electronic stock quotation board outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, September 22, 2017. Reuters/File Photo

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 0.4 per cent, aiming for a 12th straight session of gains. It is up 8 per cent for the year so far.

Japan’s Nikkei rose 0.5 per cent as the yen eased a little, while South Korea notched a record.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng also rose 0.5 per cent. It has been the best performer for the year with a rise of more than 11 per cent, followed by Shanghai blue chips with gains of nearly 9 per cent, though the latter dipped on Monday.

Wall Street has likewise been on a tear. Just last week, the Dow rose 2.08 percent, the S&P 500 2.22 percent and the Nasdaq 2.31 per cent.

Quarterly earnings growth for the S&P 500 is estimated at 13.2 per cent, according to Thomson Reuters data, up from 12 per cent at the start of the year. Of the 133 companies in the index that have reported, almost 80 per cent beat forecasts.

Another 36 per cent of the S&P 500 is due to report this week including heavy hitters Apple, Alphabet, Facebook, Microsoft and Amazon.

The rush to equities combined with the risk of faster global inflation, has been a major negative for sovereign bonds with yields rising across much of the developed world.

Yields on US two-year Treasuries have risen steadily to their highest since 2008 and are fully priced for a rate hike by the Federal Reserve in March.

Ten-year yields broke above the range of the last week or so to reach 2.69 per cent on Monday, levels last visited in mid-2014.

The Fed holds its next meeting on Wednesday, the last for Chair Janet Yellen, and analysts suspect the statement will only cement expectations for a March move.

Words matter

The inexorable increase in Treasury yields has not, however, been enough to rescue the US dollar which sank to three-year lows last week as US officials welcomed a weaker currency.

President Donald Trump did try and walk some of that back late in the week but by then the damage had been done.

Indeed, in an interview shown on Sunday, Trump threatened to confront the European Union over what he calls “very unfair” trade policy toward the US.

“‘Words’ in the world of FX do matter,” said Deutsche Bank strategist George Saravelos. “The US is reengaging with a weak dollar policy similarly to the 1994-95 period.”

This was happening while the sum of trade and investment flows into the United States was shrinking. The opposite was happening in the euro zone, where the German export engine was powering an ever-expanding current account surplus.

“We continue to target $1.30 in EUR/USD for this year,” Saravelos concluded.

The euro did run into a little profit-taking in Asia on Monday which nudged it to back to $1.2393 and away from a three-year peak of $1.2538 last week, reports Reuters.

The dollar was a fraction firmer on the yen at 108.89, but not far from a four-month trough of 108.28.

Against a basket of major currencies, it edged up 0.2 per cent to 89.281 having been at the lowest since late 2014.

The dollar faces a bevy of US economic reports this week including releases on inflation, manufacturing and payrolls.

The currency’s decline has been a boon for many commodities, with gold making a 17-month top last week and last trading at $1,348.10 an ounce.

Oil prices had reached their highest in three years and Brent crude futures were holding atop $70 at $70.40 a barrel. US crude futures were up 18 cents at $66.32.

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