Asia shares mostly up, dollar approaches 105 yen | Inquirer Business

Asia shares mostly up, dollar approaches 105 yen

/ 12:00 AM September 03, 2014

A man checks the stock prices on an electronic stock board of a securities firm in Tokyo on Aug. 19, 2014. Asian markets mostly rose on Tuesday, Sept. 2, with Tokyo gaining more than one percent as the yen sank against the dollar, while Shanghai was boosted by hopes China will introduce economy-boosting measures. AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko

HONG KONG–Asian markets mostly rose on Tuesday, with Tokyo gaining more than one percent as the yen sank against the dollar, while Shanghai was boosted by hopes China will introduce economy-boosting measures.

With Wall Street closed for the Labor Day weekend investors were given an anemic lead from Europe, where traders were eyeing the standoff between Russia and the West over Ukraine.

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Tokyo rallied 1.24 percent, or 192.00 points, to 15,668.60 and Sydney rose 0.51 percent, or 28.67 points, to close at a six-year high of 5,658.5.

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Shanghai jumped 1.37 percent, or 30.54 points, to 2,266.05. Hong Kong finished almost unchanged, edging down 3.07 points to 24,749.02.

However, Seoul closed 0.79 percent lower, giving up 16.28 points to 2,051.58.

The Nikkei was the stand-out major performer Tuesday as the dollar edged toward the 105 yen level not seen since the start of the year, with analysts suggesting dealers are betting on the Bank of Japan to loosen monetary policy.

A weaker yen boosts Japanese exporters.

Osamu Takashima, chief FX strategist at Citigroup Global Markets Japan, said in a note that recent weakness in the yen suggests dealers “have quietly started factoring in the BoJ’s additional monetary easing.”

The bank holds a two-day policy meeting this week following a string of weak data, with its policymakers facing calls to unveil new economy-boosting measures which would tend to weigh on the yen.

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Against that, the US Federal Reserve is being urged in some quarters to raise interest rates–which lift the dollar–as the world’s No. 1 economy gets back on track.

In Asian trade the dollar was at 104.82 yen, against 104.27 yen in European trade. The yen also eased to 137.65 to the euro from 136.94 in Europe.

However, the euro dipped to $1.3129 from $1.3133, with expectations increasing that the European Central Bank will announce policies at a meeting this week to fight off deflation in the troubled bloc.

Fears of Ukraine conflict

Pressure increased Monday on the bank to move after an index of eurozone manufacturing showed activity slipped in August.

Markit’s purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell to 50.7, from 51.8 in July. While anything above 50 shows growth the sharp drop has fuelled fears for the region.

Dealers are watching events in eastern Europe after NATO accused Russia of sending in around 1,000 troops to support anti-government rebels in Ukraine’s east.

That came a day after Russian President Vladimir Putin called for the first time for statehood to be discussed for the restive region.

The events have raised fears of a conflict in Europe and led the West to warn of fresh sanctions against Moscow, while German President Joachim Gauck said Putin has “effectively severed its partnership” with Europe and wants to establish a new order.

In China dealers are betting on Beijing introducing more accommodative measures after the release Monday of its official PMI and a separate one by HSBC showing a slowdown in manufacturing growth.

While leaders have refused to launch anything on the scale of the stimulus seen in 2008, traders are hoping a batch of small measures seen earlier this year could be added to.

On oil markets US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for October delivery eased 30 cents to $95.66. Brent crude for October was down 26 cents to $102.53 in afternoon trade.

Gold traded at $1,271.33 an ounce at 1120 GMT, from $1,286.98 late Monday.

In other markets:

— Mumbai swept past the 27,000-point mark to a record closing high. The Sensex ended the day up 0.57 percent, or 151.84 points, at 27,019.39 points

Cipla surged 5.23 percent, or 27.70 points, to close at 557.40 rupees, while India’s biggest cellular operator Bharti Airtel climbed 4.24 percent of 15.95 rupees to 391.90 rupees

— Bangkok added 0.21 percent, or 3.25 points, to close at 1,568.60.

Bangkok Bank gained 0.95 percent, or 2 baht, to 212, while Airport of Thailand lost 0.84 percent, or 2 baht, to 237.

— Singapore rose 0.43 percent, or 14.17 points, to 3,328.30.

Singapore Telecommunications rose 1.81 percent to Sg$3.94 while DBS Bank eased 0.11 percent to Sg$17.93.

— Jakarta ended up 0.46 percent, or 23.97 points, at 5,201.59.

Bank Negara Indonesia rose 2.79 percent to 5,525 rupiah, while Hero Supermarket fell 0.59 percent to 2,525 rupiah.

— Kuala Lumpur’s main index gained 1.58 points, or 0.01 percent, to 1,867.69.

Malayan Banking added 0.40 percent to 10.14 ringgit, Telekom Malaysia rose 0.31 percent to 6.38 while Public Bank lost 0.52 percent to 19.18 ringgit.

— Taipei shed 1.19 percent, or 113.34 points, to end at 9,399.72.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. fell 1.95 percent to Tw$126.0 while Hon Hai Precision was 0.99 percent lower at Tw$100.5.

— Wellington rose 0.12 percent, or 6.37 points, to 5,221.77.

Fletcher Building was up 0.66 percent at NZ$9.18 and Air New Zealand was flat on NZ$2.17.

— Manila closed 0.33 percent higher, adding 23.07 points to 7,106.56.

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TAGS: Asia, Finance, Forex, stocks

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