2017-08-30 12:13

Most Asian Stocks Rebound as Korean Fears Abate: Markets Wrap

Yuya Shino („Reuters“/„Scanpix“) nuotr.
Yuya Shino („Reuters“/„Scanpix“) nuotr.
Most Asian stocks advanced after President Donald Trump’s measured response to North Korean missile launches and comments from Kim Jong Un suggested geopolitical tensions will ease off. The Australian dollar jumped.

Equity indexes in Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea gained after U.S. stocks rebounded from losses initially sparked when Kim’s regime fired a missile over Japan. The Australian dollar outperformed its developed-market peers after building approvals data beat estimates. Bond yields rose as risk assets came back in favor and gold held at the highest level this year.

Asian markets were roiled on Tuesday after North Korea fired a ballistic missile over Japan in an act the latter called an “unprecedented, grave and serious threat.” Trump said the U.S. will consider “all options” in its response. Kim said Wednesday the missile was in protest at annual military exercises between the U.S. and South Korea. That suggests the standoff is unlikely to intensify and, coupled with Trump’s tempered remarks, helped underpin risk assets.

“We’ve seen the typical reaction that you would expect yesterday, with the safe haven assets like the yen gaining and the Korean won obviously weakening and equity markets in this region selling off,” Khoon Goh, Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd.’s head of Asia research, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “What’s interesting is that the reaction has been fairly muted and a lot of the moves have largely reversed and I think it’s a case now where what’s happening with North Korea is not necessarily new.”

Among other key events looming this week:

Inflation data from the euro zone’s largest economies this week may show prices nudged up in August. The U.S. updates second-quarter GDP and core price data on Wednesday, and reports on August payrolls on Friday.

And here are the main moves in markets: Stocks

The Topix index rose 0.6 percent as of 2:01 p.m. Tokyo time and the Kospi index edged higher. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index swung between gains and losses. Read here why the Aussie equity market can’t catch a break. The Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong climbed 0.8 percent, while the Shanghai Composite Index was little changed. Contracts on the S&P 500 Index increased 0.1 percent. The cash gauge finished Tuesday 0.1 percent higher.

Currencies

The yen was down 0.1 percent at 109.77 per dollar after dropping 0.4 percent. It rallied on Tuesday as safe havens advanced, only to more than give up those gains as investors speculated the event won’t flare up. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.1 percent, close to its lowest in more than two years and on track for a third quarter of losses. The Aussie dollar jumped 0.4 percent to 79.87 U.S. cents. The euro was steady at $1.1974, after touching the strongest in almost three years.

Bonds

The yield on 10-year Treasuries rose two basis point to 2.15 percent. It dropped as low as 2.08 percent on Tuesday, the least in 10 months. Australian 10-year note yields advanced four basis points to 2.67 percent.

Commodities

West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.3 percent to $46.29 a barrel. Gold was at $1,311.70 an ounce after reaching the strongest level in 11 months. Gasoline for September delivery rose 3.2 percent to $1.8396 a gallon and is up more than 9 percent this week.

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