Global Markets: Asian shares rise for fourth day on earnings, China stimulus hopes

Reuters  |  TOKYO 

By Hideyuki Sano

MSCI's broadest index of shares outside gained 0.3 percent, led by Taiwan, while Japan's Nikkei ticked up 0.4 percent.

Bucking the trend were Chinese shares, which slipped about 0.4 percent after the said it would begin collecting 25 percent tariffs on an additional $16 billion worth of Chinese goods this month, the second leg of its first China-targetted tariffs on $50 billion goods.

that the fresh duties will go into effect from Aug. 23 overshadowed strong Chinese trade data, which showed exports rose more than expected in July despite U.S. tariffs imposed early last month. Imports also rose more than forecast, suggesting its domestic demand remains resilient despite trade war fears.

But losses in markets were tempered by signs is unveiling further measures to support growth, such as increasing infrastructure spending and tweaking its monetary policy stance.

"China's apparent policy shift from structural reforms to short-term policy support appears to be starting to give some support to other major markets," said Chotaro Morita, at

"Yet the reason they have to do so is escalating trade tensions so you can't expect much upside. On the other hand, a boost to the U.S. from tax cuts is peaking out soon. In coming months, the focus will be how markets will price in this peak out," he added.

On Wall Street, the rose 0.28 percent to 2,858, which is just 14 points, or about 0.5 percent, below its record high marked in January.

A strong second-quarter earnings season has fuelled optimism about U.S. economic strength. firms saw a 23.5 percent rise in their April-June profits, according to data.

Against this backdrop, the index, a measure of investors' expectation on U.S. share price volatilities and often viewed as a gauge of anxiety in financial markets, fell to a seven-month low of 10.93.

jumped 11 percent after said he was considering taking the private.

CURRENCIES

In the foreign exchange market, major currencies kept to tight ranges. The euro was at $1.1599, off Monday's five-week low of $1.1530.

The yen stood little changed at 111.38 per dollar while worries about a hard Brexit kept the sterling at $1.2938, just above its 11-month trough of $1.2920 set on Monday.

The Chinese yuan was little changed, keeping some distance from its 15-month lows hit last week as the central on Friday took steps to curb bets against the currency by raising the cost for investors to short the yuan.

But pressure on the Chinese currency remained strong.

"The Chinese authorities do not seem to be aiming to push up the yuan. Considering that U.S. is likely to impose another tariff on $200 billion imports from China, speculators are betting on further falls in the yuan," said Naoki Tashiro, of TS Research.

"The U.S. is raising rates while is easing its monetary policy. For speculators, dollar buying is the obvious trade," he added.

The Turkish lira, the biggest mover in recent days, kept some distance from Monday's record low, trading at 5.2600 per dollar, versus Monday's low of 5.425,

Still, it is down almost 7 percent so far this month on deepening concerns about a rift with the and on Tayyip Erdogan's influence over the central

prices held firm after U.S. sanctions on Iranian goods went into effect, intensifying concerns that sanctions on Iranian oil, expected in November, could cause supply shortages.

Brent futures stood at $74.65 a barrel, flat on the day but maintaining gains of about 2 percent so far this week. U.S. Intermediate (WTI) crude futures traded at $69.25 per barrel, up 0.1 percent on the day for a gain of 1.1 percent this week.

(Editing by and Kim Coghill)

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

First Published: Wed, August 08 2018. 09:26 IST