Asia shares lag Wall St amid dollar strength

Reuters  |  SYDNEY 

By Wayne Cole

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Asian shares crept higher on Monday after a tame reading on U.S. wages lessened the risk of faster rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, although Sino-U.S. trade tensions and a looming deadline for the Iranian nuclear deal argued for caution.

The week ahead also has important readings on the health of the Chinese economy, and hence global demand, as well as the latest data on U.S. consumer price inflation.

The early action was limited with MSCI's broadest index of shares outside up 0.2 percent.

Japan's Nikkei was flat, while Australian stocks added 0.3 percent. E-Mini futures for the also inched up 0.2 percent.

Friday's U.S. jobs report showed unemployment dropping to a new cycle low of 3.9 percent yet wages remained benign, suggesting the Federal Reserve would keep raising rates but at a gradual pace.

That outlook cheered Wall Street where the Dow ended Friday up 1.39 percent, while the rose 1.28 percent and the Nasdaq 1.71 percent. [.N]

hit a record high after Warren Buffett's disclosed that it had raised its stake in the maker.

The recent run of solid U.S. economic contrasts with a softer turn in European data and lifted the to its highest for the year so far against the

The single was last at $1.1961, having been down as deep as $1.1911 on Friday. The also reached its highest since December against a basket of currencies and was last trading at 92.576.

It had less luck against the Japanese yen, in part because strains in emerging market currencies were supporting safe havens such as the yen. The was at 109.03, having topped out around 110.05 last week.

"It's this recovery in the U.S. dollar - one based on the data flow in the U.S. against the rest of the world - which is catching many by surprise and causing ructions across emerging markets," said Greg McKenna, at and FX provider

Markets from to have been under intense pressure, in part because many of these countries have large amounts of U.S. dollar debt which gets more expensive to finance as the rises.

A firming U.S. dollar has also been negative for some commodities, with gold falling for a third straight week to last trade at $1,114.79 an ounce.

Oil, on the other hand, was near its highest in more than three years as global supplies remained tight and the market awaited from on possible new U.S. sanctions against

has set a May 12 deadline for Europeans to "fix" the deal with over its nuclear program or he would refuse to extend U.S. sanctions relief for the oil-producing Islamic Republic.

Brent crude futures added 11 cents to $74.98 a barrel, while U.S. crude gained 9 cents to $69.81.

(Editing by Sam Holmes)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, May 07 2018. 08:13 IST