Asia Shares Rise on Oil Price Gains
May 25 2016 - 12:00AM
Dow Jones News
Shares across Asia rose Wednesday as oil prices advanced to
their highest levels in more than seven months, while investors
appeared to be more upbeat about the prospect of a U.S.
interest-rate increase after the release of strong economic data
there.
Stocks in Hong Kong were up 2.5%, led up by state-owned energy
companies such as PetroChina Co., which surged more than 4.3%.
Energy stocks on the benchmark Hang Seng Index gained 3.4%.
Elsewhere, Japan's Nikkei Stock Average rallied by 1.8%, while
Australia's S&P ASX 200 was up 1.8% and South Korea's Kospi was
up 1.1%. The Shanghai Composite Index edged up 0.3%.
Crude-oil prices, which rose overnight and continued to tack on
gains in the Asia trading day, jolted the region's markets.
Analysts were watching for a possible break above $50 a barrel, a
level that for months hasn't been challenged amid worries about a
global glut.
Also underpinning Asia's gains was robust U.S. housing data
Tuesday, indicating a strengthening domestic economy that would
allow room for the Federal Reserve to tighten monetary policy as
early as June. Sales of new homes in the U.S. rose at the fastest
pace in more than eight years in April, helping drive the S&P
500 to finish up 1.4%, its biggest gain in more than two
months.
Still, traders in Asia viewed Tuesday's gains with
skepticism.
"I still expect increased volatility in early trades," said
Andrew Sullivan, managing director at Haitong International
Securities.
"Expect the market to drift lower" and traders to short the
market again, he said, referring to the recent rise in negative
bets on the Hang Seng Index.
The MSCI Asia Pacific benchmark of stocks has slumped nearly 5%
from late April as a rising U.S. dollar rattles investments in many
commodities and emerging-market assets. In Hong Kong, daily trading
volumes have fallen to their lowest levels this year on
uncertainties over the pace of U.S. rate increases.
In Japan, shares of Sony Corp. surged 7% despite the company's
forecast Tuesday that its core image sensor business would record a
deeper loss this fiscal year.
A move to stop making high-end camera module components for
external customers will likely remove uncertainties from the
company's business portfolio. With its gaming and music businesses
remaining strong, Sony is on track to achieve a ¥ 500 billion
($4.54 billion) operating profit milestone in the next fiscal year,
ending March 2018, analysts said.
In China, the central bank Wednesday guided the yuan to its
weakest level against the U.S. currency in more than five years,
reflecting a stronger dollar overnight. The weaker fixing helped
cap gains in Shanghai stocks, which had been up as much as 0.8%
earlier in the morning.
The dollar has now reached its highest level in two months.
Analysts said the yuan would come under renewed depreciation
pressure as expectations build for the Fed to resume raising
interest rates.
Takashi Mochizuki and Gregor Stuart Hunter contributed to this
article
Write to Chao Deng at Chao.Deng@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 25, 2016 00:45 ET (04:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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