An employee of the Tokyo Stock Exchange works at the bourse at TSE, Feb. 9, 2016.
Photo: REUTERS/ISSEI KATO
Asian stocks snapped a four-day losing streak on Tuesday as
an overnight bounce in U.S. shares boosted risk appetite while gold
briefly popped to a one-year high on growing expectations of more policy
stimulus.
Market attention will be focused on the Australian central
bank's interest rate decision later in the day. Economists don't expect
any change to policy at this meeting so a surprise rate cut would add to
concerns about the lack of growth in the global economy.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
edged 0.39 percent higher in early trade, rising from a three-week low
tested on Monday.
U.S. stocks rose on Monday, rebounding from losses last
week, as financials gained with Berkshire Hathaway and dollar weakness
eased worries about corporate earnings.
In currency markets, the dollar nursed sharp losses sustained against
other currencies in the previous sessions with a lackluster reading on
growth in the U.S. manufacturing sector weighing on sentiment.The yen's near 5 percent gains against the dollar last week after a shock decision by Tokyo to keep monetary policy unchanged capped its best weekly performance since the depths of the global financial crisis in 2008.
In early trading on Tuesday, the yen rose to a fresh 18-month high against the dollar, with the greenback trading at 106.14 yen.
The dollar index, which measures the dollar's performance against a trade-weighted basket of its peers, is trading at its lowest since January 2015.
In Asia, despite its recent losses, the Australian dollar
remains vulnerable to any sudden policy changes due to heavy
positioning. Currency futures positioning reveal long positions in the
Aussie at their highest levels in almost two years.
Thin liquidity also amplified moves with Japan in the middle
of its Golden Week series of holidays. Markets were closed on Friday,
and will be closed on Tuesday to Thursday this week.
After raising interest rates in December for the
first time in nearly a decade, the Fed held monetary policy steady last
week. While it kept the door open to a hike in June, it gave no signal
that it was in a hurry to tighten further given the economy's slowdown,
even as the labor market has improved.
Crude oil futures edged lower after hitting 2016 highs on Friday as fears of a global supply glut eased.
Oil futures were broadly steady at $44.76 a barrel in Asian
trading after hitting $46.78 a barrel on Friday, an 80 percent rally
since their February lows.
Spot gold briefly rose above $1,300 an ounce in the previous
session, its highest since January 2015, before edging lower on
Tuesday.
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