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Friday, September 25, 2020

Asian shares make tepid recovery on tech rally and stimulus hopes - Reuters

SHANGHAI/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Asian shares rose on Friday after robust U.S. housing data supported a late tech-driven rally on Wall Street, with investors picking up the pieces a day after a broad regional index posted its biggest daily loss in more than three months.

FILE PHOTO: People wearing protective face masks, following an outbreak of the coronavirus, are reflected on a screen showing Nikkei index, outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan February 28, 2020. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha

U.S. stocks ended positive in choppy trade on Thursday, led by a dogged comeback in the technology sector, having initially sold off on higher-than-expected unemployment claims.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS was 0.4% higher, after slumping 2.15% a day earlier, its biggest daily drop since June 11.

European shares seemed set for similar tepid gains, with the euro Stoxx50 futures STXec1 up 0.48% at 0550 GMT, while German DAX futures FDXc1 were up 0.5%.

Even after Friday’s rise, the MSCI Asia stock index appeared on track to post its largest weekly drop since March, pulled lower by fears that the global recovery from the novel coronavirus pandemic could be running out of steam. Investors have also been uncertain about Washington’s ability to pass a stimulus package after Fed officials indicated they expected more fiscal support.

News that Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives are working on a $2.2 trillion coronavirus stimulus package that could be voted on next week, and that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi reiterated she is ready to negotiate on it with the White House helped to assuage some of those fears on Friday.

“Sometimes the best environment for global equities is a weak economy where the government’s trying to stimulate. That’s actually a positive backdrop,” said Michael Frazis, portfolio manager at Frazis Capital Partners in Sydney.

“And you’ve got to remember ... we’re coming off a true panic scenario in March. So the rally looks strong from that level, but only because that was such severe panic. In our view it was the selloff that was irrational, not the rally.”

Chinese blue-chips .CSI300 were flat in a choppy session and South Korean shares .KS11 were 0.57% higher. Australian shares .AXJO jumped 1.3%, with financials rising the most in more than three months on plans to ease bank lending laws.

Japan's Nikkei .N225 added 0.5%.

(Graphic: MSCI World over the years - )

“What we’ve seen for equity markets is there is quite a good deal of resilience,” said Tom Piotrowski, a market analyst at Australian broker CommSec.

“Commentators like to stack up all of the negatives markets face, the U.S. election being among them, but I think there is a sense that there is an underlying resilience in the market.”

On Wall Street overnight, the Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI rose 0.2%, the S&P 500 .SPX gained 0.30% and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC added 0.37%.

While the economic picture in the U.S. remains clouded, the strongest sales of single-family homes in nearly 14 years in August helped to revive some faith in the recovery.

Reviving risk sentiment helped to push the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield US10YT=RR up to 0.6725% from a close of 0.664% on Thursday.

It also pushed the dollar off Thursday's two-month highs, causing it to slip to 105.34 JPY=EBS versus the yen. The euro EUR=EBS was flat at $1.1666.

The dollar index =USD, which measures the dollar against a basket of six major peers, flatlined around 94.350.

The dollar's strength this week has battered commodities, with gold set for its worst week in more than a month. On Friday, spot gold XAU= was 0.16% lower at $1,865.16 per ounce. [GOL/]

U.S. crude CLc1 was 0.15% higher at $40.46 per barrel and global benchmark Brent crude LCOc1 was up 0.1% at $41.98 per barrel.

Reporting by Andrew Galbraith in Shanghai and Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Additional reporting by Vidya Ranganathan; Editing by Sam Holmes, Christopher Cushing and Simon Cameron-Moore

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Asian shares make tepid recovery on tech rally and stimulus hopes - Reuters
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