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Asia stocks rise for 3rd day on earnings; dollar stalls

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HONG KONG: Asian stocks edged higher for a third consecutive day on Wednesday as investors focused on strong corporate earnings and the dollar gave back some of its recent gains.


US President Donald Trump’s abrupt dismissal of Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey prompted some unwinding of risky bets in early Asian trading but strategists said investors were cheered by a strong slate of corporate earnings, reflecting the cyclical rebound in the first quarter of 2017 was still in place.


European stocks are set to follow Asia’s example, with major indices set for a broadly flat start according to index futures.


“Markets are setting aside the many policy changes seen from the Trump administration and focusing on the improvement in corporate performance and that should support sentiment,” said Tai Hui, chief Asia market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management in Hong Kong.


With results in for the majority of the companies on the S&P 500, estimated Q1 earnings growth is now at 14.5 per cent, highest since Q3 of 2011, Thomson Reuters data shows with roughly 75 pc of companies are beating analysts’ expectations.


That has helped Asia as well, with 12-month forward earnings per share for the MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rising to its highest level in more than three years.


“Strong corporate earnings are supporting risk sentiment in the Asian equity markets, said Fan Cheuk Wan, head of investment strategy and advisory at HSBC Private Banking.


MSCI’s Asia ex Japan index rose 0.3 per cent after posting modest gains in the previous session.


It hit a two-year high last week.


South Korean stocks led losers as investors took profits after liberal leader Moon Jae-In was elected president, while losses in Australia’s big banks weighed on the broader market after the government levied taxes on the lenders to help balance the budget.


Chinese stocks edged higher, shrugging off news that showed April’s producer price inflation cooled more than expected, with investors stepping into the market to scoop up bargains after a recent fall.


Markets were also relieved when US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross signalled the Trump administration would attempt to use existing tools to aggressively enforce trade rules and insist on fairer treatment for US goods, rather than adopt the slash-and-burn approach Trump promoted on the campaign trail in 2016.


In currencies, the dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, was flat at 99.435, moving away from a three-week high of 99.688.


Rising US yields propped up the dollar to its strongest level against the Japanese yen in two months at 114.32 in the previous session but it gave back some of those gains after Trump fired FBI Director Comey in a move that shocked Washington.


It was last changing hands at 113.76 per dollar, while yields on benchmark 10-year US Treasury notes were lurking near their highest levels since end-March at 2.39 per cent.


But some market analysts pointed out with market volatility indicators hitting record lows — the VIX indicator fell overnight to 9.56, its lowest since late 2006 — the likelihood of a large move in financial markets has grown.


“Geopolitics and the divergence of policy have not gone away,” Marc Chandler, global head of FX strategy wrote in a daily note.


“It is a reminder that we are often lulled into complacency just before being shocked by how treacherous things really are.”


Fed funds futures pricing showed investors almost universally expect the Federal Reserve to raise US overnight interest rates at its next meeting, with close to a 90 per cent perceived chance of an increase next month. — Reuters


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