Hong Kong stocks ended the Year of the Rooster leading a rally across Asian markets yesterday and extending a rebound from last week’s turmoil, as investors tracked a strong lead from Wall Street.
A key US inflation reading showed prices shot up in January, sending Treasury yields rising and fanning expectations the Federal Reserve will hike interest rates at a sharper pace than expected a few months ago.
However, while the news initially sent US equities tumbling, they soon recovered and all three main indexes on Wall Street finished at least 1% higher, with dealers soothed by a surprisingly heavy drop in retail sales that eased inflation fears.
Global markets went into a tailspin last week on rising T-Bill rates and the prospect of higher borrowing costs caused by a resurgent US economy and improving wages.
But this week has seen a recovery, though there remains an element of caution as analysts warn of further turmoil after a stellar 2018 and January that saw several record and multi-year highs hit. As traders headed into the Chinese New Year break, Hong Kong ended 2% higher at 31,115.43.
The index rose 5.6% over the past three days, helping it bite into last week’s drop of more than 9%.
Tokyo ended 1.5 % higher at 21,464.98, despite a surge in the yen against the dollar, which tends to hurt exporters.
Sydney and Singapore each rose 1.2%, while Wellington added 0.1%.
Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok and Jakarta were also up.
Shanghai, Seoul, Taipei were closed for the Lunar New Year.
Stephen Innes, head of Asia-Pacific trading at OANDA, said: “In seemingly absurd fashion, US equity investors ignored the inflationary signals and focused on weaker-than-expected US retail sales report.
“There is an increasing possibility that (incoming Fed boss Jerome) Powell may blink and the Fed will be more hesitant to guide monetary policy given the waning growth narrative.”
On currency markets the dollar is taking a hit across the board, with the yen at fresh 15-month highs, while the euro built on Wednesday’s gains that came after figures showed solid German economic growth.
The greenback is coming under the cosh despite the strong inflation print.
“I’m not going to pretend I have a clue this morning,” said Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrader.
“Stocks have surged and the US dollar has been poleaxed.
That’s even though the market expectations of a March hike increased.”
The dollar was also sharply down against most high-yielding units, including the Australian dollar, South Korean won, Indonesian rupiah and Thai baht.
The South African rand is around a three-year high after Jacob Zuma resigned as president, as the ruling ANC party finally turned against him after nine years of corruption scandals, economic slowdown and falling popularity. Commodities were buoyed by the weakening dollar as it makes them cheaper for holders of other currencies.
Both main oil contracts extended Wednesday’s surge, with help also coming from suggestions by Saudi Arabia’s energy minister that key producers in Opec and Russia would maintain caps on output.

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