Asian stocks rose across the board on Tuesday after a rally on Wall Street and steps by China to shore up its economy boosted risk appetite, while Greek debt worries again haunted the sagging euro.
Spreadbetters expected European shares to pull back slightly after Monday’s rise, calling for Britain’s FTSE, Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC to open a touch lower.
Tracking overnight gains in US stocks, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was up 0.5 per cent. The index was on track for a 4 per cent gain this quarter.
Australian shares rose 0.9 per cent. Bourses in South Korea, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Indonesia rose as well. Japan’s Nikkei bucked the trend and lost 0.2 per cent.
The often volatile Shanghai Composite Index followed up Monday’s rally, scaling seven-year highs on hopes for more infrastructure spending and monetary easing. The index led its Asian peers with a 17 per cent gain this quarter.
The Dow and S&P 500 both climbed more than 1 per cent Monday with sentiment buoyed by robust Chinese equities.
Silk Road initiative
After unveiling details over the week-end for a modern ‘Silk Road’ that could pump tens of billions of dollars into investment, China had late on Monday announced steps to ease housing taxes and lending rules to prop up sliding house prices that have threatened the economic growth.
“Tax cuts, reductions to down payments on second homes, along with further moves to (reserve) requirement ratios have all been introduced to assist China’s slowing housing sector and will be a medium-term positive in the global growth story,’’ Evan Lucas, market strategist at IG in Melbourne, said in a note to clients.
Chinese central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan’s recent warning that China needs to be vigilant for signs of deflation have also helped fuel hopes for more easing.
"We believe policymakers are increasingly concerned about weakening growth and inflation, and will deploy more monetary and fiscal easing measures in the coming weeks," economists at HSBC said.
Euro vs other currencies
In currencies, the euro was down 0.4 per cent at $1.0788 , adding to an overnight loss of 0.5 per cent. The euro looked to lose about 10 per cent this quarter versus the dollar.
The common currency fell against the dollar on worries whether Greece can secure aid before it runs out of cash in three weeks. Germany, Greece’s biggest creditor, demanded that it show more commitment to reform while Athens said it cannot make an “unconditional’’ agreement with lenders.
The dollar was little changed at 120.20 yen after surging from an overnight low of 119.105. The greenback was poised for a modest 0.4 percent rise this quarter.
The Australian dollar found little support from prospects of more stimulus and monetary easing from China, Australia's key trading partner.
The Aussie lost 0.4 per cent to $0.7626 after skidding more than one percent overnight amid persistent expectations of further interest rate cuts by the Reserve Bank of Australia.
Crude oil
US crude extended losses as the March 31 deadline loomed for Iran and six world powers negotiating a deal for Tehran’s nuclear programme.
If agreement to end Western sanctions is reached OPEC-member Iran would be able to ship more crude into an already saturated market.
US crude was down 1.3 per cent at $48.06 per barrel.