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Asia Shares Ride Global Momentum, Dollar Up On Fed Rate Hike Bets

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.1% early on Wednesday.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.1% early on Wednesday.

Singapore: Asian stocks followed global indices higher on Wednesday, as strong earnings and manufacturing data boosted risk appetite, while expectations that the Federal Reserve will signal a June rate increase later in the session lifted the dollar. Oil prices pulled higher after a sharp fall on Tuesday on technical selling in a market already worried about oversupply and following a rise in output from several members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.1 per cent early on Wednesday, within a hair of a near-two-year high hit on Tuesday.

Australian shares slipped 0.1 per cent.

Hong Kong and South Korea are closed for Buddha's Birthday, and Japan is shut for the rest of the week for the Golden Week holiday.

The MSCI World index hit a record high overnight, while the pan-European Stoxx index jumped to its highest level since August 2015 overnight as major European indexes posted gains.

Overnight, Wall Street closed higher, although Nasdaq futures fell alongside Apple shares in extended trading, after the company reported a surprise fall in iPhone sales for the second quarter.

Net income still beat analyst estimates.

A decline in US new vehicle sales for April, following a disappointing March is prompting worries that the industry, which has seen a nearly uninterrupted boom since 2010, may be on a downward swing.

Markets are awaiting word from the US central bank, which concludes its two-day meeting later on Wednesday. With the central bank largely expected to hold interest rates steady, the focus will be on language about future increases.

Since the last meeting, economic data has been mixed, with the economy growing at a sluggish 0.7 per cent annual pace in the first quarter as consumer spending almost stalled, but a surge in business investment and the fastest wage growth in a decade suggest activity will regain momentum as the year progresses.

"Second quarter gross domestic product is already shaping up to be in far better shape and we are seeing calls for economists for growth north of 3 per cent," Chris Weston, chief market strategist at IG in Melbourne, wrote in a note.

"Clearly, the improvement (in broader financial conditions) has been driven by tighter credit spreads and US equity markets hitting all-time highs or approaching them," he added. "Earnings have been at the heart of this feel-good factor."

The dollar was steady at 111.97 yen early on Wednesday. It touched a six-week high on Tuesday but fell back to close 0.4 per cent higher.

The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of trade-weighted peers, slipped 0.1 per cent on Wednesday after earlier climbing as much as 0.25 per cent.

The euro was marginally higher at $1.0935, extending Tuesday's 0.3 per cent gain.

Sterling was steady at $1.2938, retaining Tuesday's 0.4 per cent gain.

Manufacturing growth for April jumped to six-year highs in Germany and France, and to a three-year high in the UK, data overnight showed.

That followed data from Asian economies including Indonesia, Malaysia, India and Japan that all showed faster manufacturing growth in April. While growth in China eased more than expected, the world's second-largest economy nevertheless avoided a sharp loss of momentum.

In commodities markets, US crude recovered 1 per cent to $48.11 a barrel, after sliding 2.4 per cent on Tuesday to its lowest closing price since March 21.

Gold was flat at $1,256.58 an ounce.

© Thomson Reuters 2017