ENM: Asia stocks climb on oil drop, US auto rescue
HONG KONG: Asia stock markets rose on Monday, with investors taking heart from a rescue plan for US automakers and hopes that the sharp drop in oil p
rices will ease some of the pain for households facing mounting layoffs. Oil prices rose more than a dollar, but the plunge to a four-year low near $40 a barrel is providing some relief to the bleak landscape of tightening credit and job losses that are hitting consumers around world.
Shares of oil producers fell, with Nippon Oil losing 5 per cent. The dollar slipped as stocks posted gains despite Friday's dismal US jobs report showing 533,000 jobs were lost in November, the most in 34 years and one of the biggest drops ever in the government data.
But a late rally on Wall Street on Friday, led by retail shares, suggested some investors believe the worst may be over after the plunge in stocks this year and a rush to safe-have bonds that has driven benchmark US Treasury yields to half-century lows.
"The US closed up in spite of the fact they got a very weak unemployment number. We've taken some solace in that and the fact that the market did not sell off, and we are finding a bit of fresh buying this morning," said Justin Gallagher, head of Sydney sales trading at ABN AMRO in Sydney.
The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan rose 4.3 per cent but remains down 57 percent as 2008 comes to a close, what would be by far the biggest yearly slide in its 20-year history. But in a sign that investors are regaining some resolve to put money to work, data from EPFR Global showed Asia ex-Japan funds recording a third straight week of inflows in the week through last Wednesday.
Japan's Nikkei average climbed 2.6 per cent on gains in domestic shares after the US S&P 500 rose 3.7 percent on Friday. For the year, the Nikkei has tumbled 48 percent and the S&P 40 percent. MORE RESCUE PACKAGES Around the world, policymakers kept up their efforts to try and revive their economies. U.S. President-elect Barack Obama said over the weekend that he plans the biggest increase in infrastructure investment since the 1950s with the goal of creating at least 2.5 million jobs.
India launched $4 billion of extra spending to support the economy, while Xinhua news agency reported that Chinese economic leaders were meeting this week on measures to keep growth above 8 percent. Also over the weekend, the White House and congressional negotiators sought to resolve the remaining difficulties over an emergency rescue for the struggling US auto industry.
Many assets have shuffled sideways in the past several weeks despite the relentless array of bleak news, giving some analysts reasons to think the worst may be over after central banks slashed interest rates and authorities put together spending packages to revive growth. "Perhaps the bad news is close to being fully priced in," said Societe Generale's FX sales desk in a note to clients.
That stability has also brought down gauges of historical volatility after what has been one of the most tumultuous years on record in financial markets. Analysts say that declining volatility typically signals that markets are trying to form a bottom.
As stock markets have steadied, the dollar and yen have slipped as investors tip-toe back into the euro and higher-yielding currencies that have been battered throughout the crisis on expectations for aggressive rate cuts. The dollar was steady against the yen at 92.77 yen, holding not far from the 13-year low struck in October, while the euro edged up 0.2 percent to 118.30 yen.
The dollar index, a gauge of its performance against six major currencies, dipped 0.2 percent 86.701 and has struggled below a 2-1/2-year high of 88.463 reached last month. Safe-haven bonds were up despite the rise in stocks, partly as caution prevailed on the economic outlook.
Japanese government bond futures jumping as market players shifted positions into the March contract as the December contract is set to expire this week. December JGB futures were up 0.68 pint at 139.81. The gains in futures dragged the benchmark 10-year yield down a basis point to 1.355 percent, near an eight-month low struck last week.