Asian Shares Gain, But Australia Bucks Trend -- Update
September 06 2016 - 2:10AM
Dow Jones News
By Ese Erheriene
Asian stock markets were broadly higher Tuesday, buoyed by the
U.S. dollar's strength, though Australian shares extended declines
after the central bank there kept interest rates unchanged.
The Nikkei Stock Average was up 0.3% after closing at its
highest level since May on Monday and building on last week's 3.5%
gain. Singapore's Straits Times Index added 1.1%, while Hong Kong's
Hang Seng Index gained 0.3%.
In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 was last down 0.4%, following
the Reserve Bank of Australia's decision Tuesday afternoon to keep
rates steady at 1.5%. The RBA signaled that the rates would remain
unchanged for the time being, after the bank eased monetary policy
in May and August.
Australian banking stocks remained mixed following the rate
decision, with National Australia Bank rising 0.4%, Commonwealth
Bank of Australia falling 0.5%, and Westpac Banking Corp. shares
flat.
Meanwhile, the yen was recently down 0.2% against the dollar,
which remained strong after the release of weaker-than-expected
U.S. jobs data on Friday, reducing the likelihood of an imminent
interest-rate increase by the Federal Reserve. A weaker yen helps
boost the competitiveness of Japanese exports.
Japanese banking stocks drove gains on the Nikkei amid
expectations that the Bank of Japan may cut back on longer-term
bond buying at its next meeting, thus boosting bond yields. Mizuho
Financial Group gained 0.8%, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group was
trading up 1.4% and Shinsei Bank Ltd was up 1.2%.
"The Japanese banking sector has been doing very well of late,"
said Angus Nicholson, a market analyst at IG. "In the lead-up to
the BOJ meeting on Sept. 21, there's a lot of speculation that the
BOJ is going to do a major recalibration of their [qualitative and
quantitative easing] policy."
Japanese banks have been some of the biggest victims of the
BOJ's monetary easing and negative-rates policy. They claim that
their profits were suffering amid very low yields on all government
bonds.
In the Philippines, the stock market benchmark PSEi was one of
the region's biggest decliners Tuesday, falling 0.6%, after U.S.
President Barack Obama abruptly canceled a first meeting with
Philippine leader Rodrigo Duterte in a rare diplomatic rupture.
Analysts point to concerns that rising tensions between the two
close allies could affect future trade deals.
The meeting was called off following bombastic comments from Mr.
Duterte on Monday demanding that their discussion not touch on his
approach to human rights and referring to the U.S. leader in
Tagalog with an expression widely translated to mean "son of a
bitch."
The decline in Philippine stocks came even as data Tuesday
showed inflation in the country slowing unexpectedly in August,
providing the central bank plenty of scope to keep monetary policy
supportive of stronger economic growth.
Elsewhere in the region, shares in India gained in early trade,
as the market played catch up to news of the weaker U.S. jobs
report after being closed for a holiday Monday. The S&P BSE
Sensex was last up 1%, while the National Stock Exchange's Nifty 50
index rose 0.9%.
Indian auto stocks outperformed after most of them reported
higher sales growth in August. Among them, Tata Motors gained 2.6%,
while Maruti Suzuki added 2.1%.
Looking ahead, investors will be watching for news from the
annual summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which
kicks off Tuesday in Laos and could move stocks in the region.
More broadly, uncertainty on the U.S. interest rate outlook may
continue ahead of speeches by Federal Reserve officials, including
one by Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President John
Williams, later this week.
Kosaku Narioka and Debiprasad Nayak contributed to this
article.
Write to Ese Erheriene at ese.erheriene@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 06, 2016 01:55 ET (05:55 GMT)
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