Bloomberg: Hong Kong shares led gains across Asian equity markets Wednesday and US and European stock futures rose in a sign of growing risk appetite. The dollar retreated against major currencies and the yen strengthened.
The Hang Seng index traded more than 2% higher to levels not seen since July, helped by a jump of as much as 8% for Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. shares following news that Ant Group Co., in which the e-commerce giant holds a stake, won approval to raise $1.5 billion for its consumer unit. Gains in Hong Kong’s benchmark index accelerated after news Chinese officials were considering further support for property developers.
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Shares in mainland China edged higher and equity benchmarks in Australia and South Korea rose. European equity futures gained alongside contracts for the S&P 500 after the US index fell in Tuesday trade. Japanese equities ran against the grain to fall about 1%.
The offshore yuan rose to the highest level since July and the dollar fell against all G-10 currencies, led by the Australian dollar, in a further signal of investor support for the Chinese economy. The yen inched higher following efforts by the Bank of Japan to depress yields on government debt.
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Australian and New Zealand 10-year government bond yields fell more than 10 basis points. The 10-year Treasury yield steadied after its biggest decline in more than a month. The price of oil traded in and out of negative territory after the biggest fall in more than a month in the prior session.
Recession concerns lingered, with former New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley saying that an imminent slowdown won’t be severe while investors continue to mull the impact the central bank’s tightening will have on the economy. They’ll be paying attention to the jobs report this week, as softening in the labor market remains the Fed’s focus.
“If you don’t see a deep recession, you see a shallow recession, all that would be the recipe for markets to see a nice rally starting perhaps in the second half,” said Vasu Menon, executive director, investment strategy for OCBC Bank Wealth Management, in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “There is a lot of liquidity on the sidelines waiting to get back into play, waiting for those macro cues.”
The focus on China followed fledgling signs Covid infections may have peaked in some of its biggest cities. Anecdotal evidence showed the country remained in the grip of the pandemic with crematoriums overwhelmed in large cities such as Shanghai.
The prospect of a rapid reopening of China’s economy after the dismantling of Covid Zero policies may fail to materialize, according to Chris Senyek, chief investment strategist for Wolfe Research.
“In our view, there’s still a massive amount of uncertainty there, and whenever growth does begin to re-accelerate, inflation headwinds are more likely than not to offset global growth tailwinds,” he said in a note.