Mettis Global News
Mettis Global News
Mettis Global News
Mettis Global News

Trending :

Dollar builds on gains in Asia after Fed, Tokyo stocks surge

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on whatsapp

AFP/APP – The dollar ticked up in Asian trade Thursday on expectations the Federal Reserve will speed up interest rate hikes this year.

Eyes are now on the release of US jobs data later in the day, with another strong reading likely adding fuel to talk that US borrowing costs will continue to rise.

After Janet Yellen's final meeting as governor, the Fed's policy board said while it remains below target, the bank expects inflation to move up this year and noted economic growth, investment and unemployment were all going in the right direction.

“There was a subtle and distinct upgrade to the language around the expansion in the US economy with employment, household spending, and business fixed investment said to 'have been solid',” said Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at CFD and FX provider AxiTrader.

The Fed's comments provided a lift for the dollar, although it is still under pressure against most of its peers as central banks around the world look to tighten monetary policy more in line with the US.

However, McKenna said that with Donald Trump enjoying a strong economy, the dollar could pull away again, adding that his plans for big infrastructure spending could fire inflation even more, leading to further rate hikes.

On equity markets Tokyo surged on a weaker yen and bargain-buying following a six-day losing streak. Sydney climbed 0.9 percent, Singapore put on 0.3 percent and Seoul was 0.1 percent higher, while there were also gains in Manila, Taipei and Jakarta.

However, Hong Kong, which last month clocked up a series of record highs, closed down 0.8 percent while Shanghai sank one percent.

Mumbai rose 0.3 percent after Finance Minister Arun Jaitley unveiled the government's final full budget before next year's election, putting aside more than $200 billion to invest in poor rural areas and to help struggling farmers.

Regional stocks have mostly fallen this week on profit-taking following a blistering January that saw many indexes hit record or multi-year highs.

Traders in New York provided a positive lead for their Asian counterparts, shaking off a two-day sell-off as they welcomed another round of upbeat corporate earnings.

They were also buoyed by Trump's broadly positive State of the Union address that struck a conciliatory note towards the Democrats and called on their support for a $1.5-trillion infrastructure investment plan.

In early European trade London rose 0.1 percent, Paris added 0.5 percent and Frankfurt put on 0.4 percent. 

Posted on: 2018-02-01T15:27:00+05:00