China on Saturday stepped up its easing tempo and cut its lending and deposit rates as the world's second largest economy tries to ward off deflation.
Australian shares posted some of the biggest gains in Asia following the China rate cut, gaining 0.6 percent (.AXJO) after touching a seven-year peak as resource shares surged.
But the impact from the weekend easing was limited on the region's overall markets.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose a modest 0.1 percent. Tokyo's Nikkei (.N225) crawled up 0.3 percent. The Shanghai Composite Index (.SSEC) edged up 0.3 percent while Malaysian and Thai shares slipped.
While
the previous rate cut in late November triggered a 26 percent surge in
Chinese shares over the following month, investors appeared less excited
this time around.
"It's
not a surprise," said Wu Kan, head of equity trading at investment firm
Shanshan Finance in Shanghai. "It's a slow bull (market) now, not the
kind of crazy bull we saw last year."
The
Aussie, a proxy of China growth-related trades, climbed to $0.7850
(AUD=D4) early in the session before impact from the China rate cut
faded and was last trading at $0.7767, down 0.6 percent.
"In
some senses this rate cut is a technical response to the fact that
lower inflation is making real borrowing costs more expensive in China,"
said Ric Spooner, chief market analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney.
Equity
markets were also cautious after revised data on Friday showed U.S.
gross domestic product expanded at a slower pace in the fourth quarter
than initially thought, and the University of Michigan's final February
reading on U.S. consumer sentiment slipped from an 11-year high but
topped expectations.
Spreadbetters
expected a mixed open for European bourses, forecasting Britain's FTSE
(.FTSE) and France's CAC (.FCHI) to open a touch lower but calling for
Germany's DAX (.GDAXI) to start slightly higher.
In
currencies, China's yuan fell to its lowest level against the dollar
since October 2012 after the country's central bank cut rates. [CNY/]
The
dollar was up 0.2 percent at 119.88 yen (JPY=) after rising to a
three-week high of 119.955. It gained about 0.6 percent last week when
upbeat U.S. data helped revive prospects of an early interest rate
increase by the Federal Reserve.
The
euro hovered near a five-week low of $1.1160. The greenback's broad
strength helped the dollar index (.DXY) rise to as high as 95.505, a
peak not seen since September 2003.
In
addition to the all-important U.S. non-farm payrolls data on Friday,
the key focus this week will be the European Central Bank (ECB) meeting
on Thursday. Investors keenly await further details on its 1 trillion
euro ($1.1 trillion) government bond-buying program, which begins this
month.
U.S.
crude fell 36 cents to $49.40 a barrel (CLc1) after Friday's $1.59 surge
petered out. Last month, U.S. crude posted the first monthly gain since
June thanks to an improving demand outlook and supply outages. [O/R]
Three-month
copper on the London Metal Exchange hovered within distance of a
two-month high of $5,944 a tonne (CMCU3) struck last week as China's
rate cut fed hopes of increased demand from the metal's top user.
[MET/L]
(Additional reporting by Samuel Shen and Pete Sweeney in Shanghai;
Editing by Shri Navaratnam, Eric Meijer and Simon Cameron-Moore)
No comments:
Post a Comment