DStv Channel 403 Saturday, 30 November 2024

Most Asian markets up as traders weigh China hope, recession fear

HONG KONG - Asian markets mostly rose on Friday after a rocky week that saw recession fears play up against growing hope that China's emergence from zero-Covid will help boost the struggling global economy.

While falling US inflation has fanned speculation the Federal Reserve will further slow its pace of interest rate hikes, several top bank officials have lined up to warn that still more needs to be done before they are satisfied prices are under control.

A series of weak indicators suggesting the economy continues to slow have rattled nerves as traders shift their view from "bad news is good news" -- as it allows the Fed to slow its rate hikes -- to "bad news is bad news".

An underwhelming earnings season so far has added to the sense of trepidation among investors, particularly in New York, where all three main indexes fell again Thursday.

However, the mood in Asia was more upbeat as traders prepared for an expected boost from China's reopening after three years of painful lockdowns.

On currency markets, the yen weakened against the dollar, even as data showed Japanese inflation hit a four-decade high of four percent, adding fuel to talk that the Bank of Japan will again tweak monetary policy, or even lift rates.

The news came a day after the central bank decided not to tighten again, having announced a surprise widening of the trading band it allows certain government bonds to trade in.

Oil extended Thursday's gains as investors focused on the recovery in demand from China, with suggestions that the country's Covid infections may have peaked adding to the optimism among commodity traders.

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