Asia markets set to benefit from global data; yen easesA Story by yamatoshinubashiThe Avanti Group (Sept. 03 2013) - Asian markets look set for a second day of gains on Tuesday after a string of upbeat factory data around the globe boosted shares and most commodities, while a delayThe Avanti Group (Sept. 03 2013)
- Asian markets look set for a second day of gains on Tuesday after a string of
upbeat factory data around the globe boosted shares and most commodities, while
a delay in a potential U.S. strike on Syria weighed on safe-havens such as gold
and the yen. While Wall Street was closed for
the Labor Day holiday, U.S. stock futures posted solid gains with the S&P
500 contract up 0.9 percent. Broad gains across European bourses lifted MSCI's
world equity index .MIWD00000PUS 0.6 percent. MSCI's broadest index of
Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS rose 1.2 percent on Monday, and
looked likely to notch up a fourth day of gains on Tuesday. The dollar climbed to a one-month
peak against the yen at 99.43, while gold eased to $1,391 an ounce as investors
rediscovered an appetite for risk. Prospects for the global economy
brightened considerably according to a fresh round of purchasing managers' surveys
for August. Factory activity in the euro zone
rose at its fastest pace in more than two years, and even manufacturing in
struggling Spain grew for the first time since April 2011. The UK's version of the survey
far outstripped expectations and sent sterling up to $1.5541 as the market
brought forward the likely timing of the first rate hike there. The euro climbed around 1 percent
against the yen to reach 131.21 yen, well away from last week's trough of
129.31. But it lost ground to the dollar at $1.3195. All of which reinforced the
impact of China's PMI which has showed activity in the country's vast
manufacturing sector was at its highest in more than a year. That buoyed industrial
commodities with copper prices rebounding 1.9 percent to $7,238 a tonne and ending
a four-day losing streak. Markets were also unwinding much
of last week's safe-haven trades as worries about an imminent military strike
against Syria eased after U.S. President Barack Obama decided to seek congressional approval. U.S. crude oil prices slipped 83
cents to $106.84 a barrel, though Brent fared better. © 2013 yamatoshinubashi |
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Added on September 3, 2013 Last Updated on September 3, 2013 Tags: the avanti group, asia, economy, market, yen |