Asia markets cheered by post-election Wall St rally

Asia markets cheered by post-election Wall St rally

A pedestrian monitors an electronic stock quotation board in Tokyo on Thursday morning, as Tokyo stocks opened higher following a rally on Wall Street after the US midterm elections produced no major surprises. (AFP photo)
A pedestrian monitors an electronic stock quotation board in Tokyo on Thursday morning, as Tokyo stocks opened higher following a rally on Wall Street after the US midterm elections produced no major surprises. (AFP photo)

TOKYO: Asian stocks rose to a one-month peak on Thursday as investors, relieved to have moved past the US midterm elections without any major political surprises, drove a Wall Street rally, while the US dollar bounced and pulled away from 2-1/2-week lows.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 0.5%.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng advanced 0.9% and the Shanghai Composite Index climbed 0.35%.

Australian stocks rose 0.5%, South Korea's KOSPI added 1.4% and Japan's Nikkei gained 1.9%.

Wall Street's main indexes rose more than 2% on Wednesday, led by the technology and healthcare sectors as the market breathed a sigh of relief after the US midterm elections, in which Democrats wrested control of the House of Representatives and Republicans retained the Senate.

"Going forward, we think the removal of uncertainty and realization of the expected outcome should be supportive for risk assets," Goldman Sachs analysts said in a report.

While a divided Congress will make it harder for President Donald Trump to push through new legislation, such as additional tax cuts, investors do not expect a reversal of recently enacted tax cuts and deregulation.

"The key point after the midterm elections is that US stocks showed they had developed immunity towards higher yields. The last time long-term Treasury yields were at this level a month ago, they had helped trigger a major fall by stocks," said Junichi Ishikawa, senior FX strategist at IG Securities in Tokyo.

"Steady US fundamentals will support this trend of equities and yields rising in tandem, which should also prop up the dollar in the longer term."

The 10-year Treasury note yield rose to 3.25% on Wednesday, its highest since Oct. 9, with Wall Street's rally reducing demand for safe-haven debt. It last stood at 3.23%.

The dollar index against a basket of six major currencies gained 0.2% to 96.188, pulling back from 95.678 plumbed on Wednesday, its lowest since Oct 22.

That low for the greenback was driven by a knee-jerk reaction to the US midterm election results, with a divided Congress seen dulling Trump's fiscal stimulus drive.

Some focus was also on the Federal Reserve's monetary policy due later on Thursday. The Fed, however, is not expected to hike interest rates until its next gathering in December and analysts expected this meeting to have limited market impact.

The central bank has tightened monetary policy three times in 2018, with the latest rate hike coming in September.

"A split Congress is unlikely to materially alter the Fed's near-term hiking trajectory and the Fed will be biased to keep raising rates until the data or financial conditions turn," strategists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch wrote.

The euro was up 0.05% at $1.1432 after pulling back sharply from a high of $1.1500 brushed earlier on Wednesday.

The dollar was a shade higher at 113.59 yen and in striking distance of a one-month peak of 113.82 reached the previous day.

In commodities, US crude futures inched up 0.05% to $61.70 a barrel after falling to an eight-month trough of $61.20 on Wednesday.

Brent crude dipped 0.08% to $72.01 a barrel following a loss of 1.4% the previous day.

Oil prices struggled after surging US crude output hit another record and domestic inventories rose more than expected. 

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