Thursday, 8 September 2016

Asian Market Update : Epic Research Malaysia

Asian shares hovered near one-year peaks on Thursday as investors awaited Chinese trade data and a policy meeting by the European Central Bank, where it may announce an extension of its asset buying campaign.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dipped 0.2 per cent, but that followed four days of gains which took it to the highest since late July 2015.

South Korea's market added 0.4 per cent, having also touched a one-year top this week.

Japan's Nikkei lost 0.1 per cent, easing away from a three-month top in the face of a strengthening yen.



China's trade report should offer some guidance on the state of global demand. So far, Asia's trade recession shows no sign of abating and economists polled by Reuters expect China's exports fell 4 per cent in August, a similar rate to July.

Imports may have fallen 4.9 per cent, which would be a significant improvement from July's 12.5 per cent fall, likely due to higher commodity prices.

Beijing would welcome any sign of improvement on the trade front as the economy has become increasingly unbalanced, with growth ever more reliant on government spending as private investment fizzles.

There was little in the way of a lead from Wall Street. The Dow ended Wednesday down 0.06 per cent, while the S&P 500 lost 0.02 per cent and the Nasdaq added 0.15 per cent to eke out a record high finish.

Apple shares rose 0.6 per cent, after the biggest company by market value unveiled its new iPhone.

The main event later on Thursday will be the ECB's regular policy meeting.

Nearly all analysts polled by Reuters expect rates to remain unchanged on Thursday, though there was more uncertainty on whether the ECB would announce an extension of its 80 billion euro (S$121 billion) of monthly asset buys.

If it were to make that call, it would likely reinforce speculation of more easing before year end and could pressure the euro.

The single currency was parked at US$1.1243 on Thursday, just off the week's top of US$1.1269.

It jumped earlier in the week when a disappointing reading on the US services sector seemed to diminish the chance of a rate hike from the Federal Reserve and slugged the US dollar across the board.

Neither was there much urgency to tighten in the Fed's latest Beige Book report on the economy, which was littered with the words "modest" and "moderate".

In particular, there was little sign of the wage pressures that the Fed is counting on to push inflation higher.

Futures markets imply only around a 15 per cent chance of a rate rise in September, rising to 42 per cent for December.

The US dollar was also steady against a basket of currencies at 94.930, having touched a one-week low at 94.690.

The yen remained firm at 101.81 per US dollar due in part to talk the Bank of Japan's board was struggling to agree on a common front for more easing at its policy review later this month.

In commodity markets, US crude extended an overnight bounce after US inventory data showed what might be the largest weekly stock draw in over three decades.

US crude was 82 US cents higher at US$46.32 a barrel, while Brent futures rose 72 US cents to US$48.70.




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