BLBG: Asian Stocks Gain, Led by Financials, as Credit Concerns Ease
By Chua Kong Ho and Ian C. Sayson
Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks rose, extending last week's rally, as South Korea pledged to pump $10.8 billion into its economy and India cut interest rates to ease the fallout from the global credit crisis.
Shinhan Financial Group Co. climbed 8 percent after South Korea stepped up efforts to prevent the nation's first recession in a decade. National Australia Bank Ltd. added 2.6 percent as money-market rates fell and on speculation policy makers will lower borrowing costs tomorrow. China Overseas Land & Investment Ltd. surged 12 percent, leading gains among property developers in China, after the state news agency reported the central bank removed loan controls.
``Risk appetite is picking up and it is driven by the improvement in credit markets and very attractive valuations in equities,'' said Nader Naeimi, a Sydney-based senior investment strategist at AMP Capital Investors, which manages about $108 billion. ``The coordinated steps taken by governments are beginning to bear results.''
The MSCI Asia Pacific excluding Japan Index rose 11.78, or 4.8 percent, to 255.47 as of 11:32 a.m. in Hong Kong. Japanese markets are shut for a holiday. All of the Asian gauge's 10 industry groups advanced, with financial companies contributing the most to the gain. Seven stocks rose for each that fell.
All markets open in Asia advanced. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index added 3.2 percent, South Korea's Kospi Index climbed 2.7 percent, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index gained 4.9 percent. Indonesia's Jakarta Composite Index climbed 8.5 percent, poised for the biggest gain since June 1999, ahead of official inflation data for October today.
Interest Rates
Futures on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index climbed 0.6 percent. The benchmark measure gained 1.5 percent on Oct. 31 as JPMorgan Chase & Co. said it will modify terms on $110 billion of mortgages and delay foreclosures.
The MSCI index of Asian stocks that includes Japan rallied 6.9 percent last week, the most in more than a year, as central bank steps to unlock credit markets spurred demand for the region's shares. The gauge still lost 20 percent in October, part of a sell-off that erased more than $9.5 trillion from the value of stocks worldwide, as credit-related losses and writedowns by financial companies approached $700 billion.
The Reserve Bank of India on Nov. 1 pushed its repurchase rate down for the second time in two weeks, capping a week of interest-rate reductions in Japan, China, South Korea and Taiwan. Cuts may continue this week, with the European Central Bank and Bank of England both setting policy on Nov. 6. Australia's central bank may also cut rates tomorrow.
Receding Concerns?
Shinhan Financial gained 8 percent to 33,800 won, the biggest gainer on the Kospi Index. Hana Financial Group Inc. climbed 13 percent to 22,650 won, while KB Financial Group Co. advanced 4.2 percent to 33,350 won.
South Korea said today it will pump an extra 14 trillion won ($10.8 billion) into its economy next year. The government will spend 3.4 trillion won more to help smaller companies and farmers, and 1.3 trillion won to boost the labor market and aid low-income earners in 2009, Finance Minister Kang Man Soo told reporters today in Gwacheon.
``Credit jitters have moved to the back of investors' minds thanks to a series of government measures,'' said Christian Jin, head of global investment in HI Asset Management Co. in Seoul, which manages the equivalent of $7.8 billion in assets.
National Australia Bank added 2.6 percent to A$24.62, Westpac Banking Corp. advanced 3.2 percent to A$20.92, and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. climbed 3.9 percent.
Australian Banks
The rate Australia's banks charge each other for three- month loans fell 19 basis points, or 0.19 percentage point, to 5.62 percent in Sydney. The Reserve Bank of Australia pumped A$1.48 billion ($992 million) into money markets today.
China Overseas Land, a property developer controlled by the nation's construction ministry, surged 12 percent to HK$9.48. Shimao Property Holdings Ltd., a mainland Chinese developer, advanced 6.4 percent to HK$4.35.
China's central bank removed temporary controls over loans to maintain stable, ``relatively fast'' economic growth and counter the global financial crisis, the official Xinhua News Agency reported Nov. 1.
Citic Resources Holdings Ltd. soared 47 percent to HK$0.84 in Hong Kong. The gain was the biggest on MSCI's benchmark index, after the company said one of its units is considering a transaction, without giving further details.
Hyundai Steel Co., South Korea's second-largest steelmaker, climbed 4.9 percent 38,400 won, while Acer Inc., the world's third-largest computer supplier, climbed 7 percent to NT$45.95 in Taipei. The companies both reported third-quarter profit that beat the estimates of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.
To contact the reporter for this story: Chua Kong Ho in Shanghai at kchua6@bloomberg.net; Ian C. Sayson in Singapore at isayson@bloomberg.net.