June 30 (LBO) – Asia stocks rose across the board on Thursday, tracking an overnight rally on Wall Street, while the safe-haven Japanese yen stopped rising as global markets bet Brexit won’t get implemented immediately.
Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets, said investors had been reassured by hopes that Britain’s EU exit wouldn’t happen immediately, meaning the status quo was unlikely to change in the short term, BBC reported.
“Whilst that doesn’t remove the uncertainty with respect to the eventual outcome, it also means that markets are going to have plenty of time to settle into their new-found reality and equilibrium,” he said.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.3 percent, pulling further away from a one-month low on Friday when it plunged more than 3 percent in reaction to Britain’s decision to leave the European Union. The index was on track to end the April-June quarter down about 1 percent.
Japan’s Nikkei climbed 0.8 percent.
Following the market’s initial panic over Brexit, “it doesn’t look like it is spreading to a financial crisis or something serious, at least at this moment,” said Hikaru Sato, senior technical analyst at Daiwa Securities in Tokyo.
Overnight, the Dow rose 1.6 percent while Britain’s FTSE rallied for the second day, letting the London benchmark retrace all of its losses right after the Brexit vote, Reuters reported. The FTSE 100 was up 3.58 percent.
U.S. President Barack Obama said on Wednesday he expects the world economy will be steady in the short run after Britain’s decision but expressed concern about longer-term global growth.
Still, expectations that major central banks will ease monetary policy in the wake of Brexit have buoyed risk assets globally.
Analysts also saw the recent plunge in sovereign debt yields as a factor driving investors to equities.
“While the full consequences of Brexit are still uncertain, the one thing it has accomplished very successfully is dropping global bond yields to new lows and keeping global monetary policy looser for longer,” wrote Angus Nicholson, market analyst at IG in Melbourne.
“Negative yielding government debt has surged… in such a situation, the drive for yield has never been stronger, which has seen people piling into dip-buying with little thought for the fundamental picture.”
German and Japanese benchmark 10-year government debt yields have both fallen to historic lows below zero over the past week. Irish, French and Dutch 10-year yields declined to record troughs on Wednesday, all approaching zero.
The 30-year U.S. Treasury yield, while still positive, has approached record lows as well.
In currencies, the battered sterling came off multi-decade lows. The pound was last traded at $1.3403, putting further distance between a 31-year trough of $1.3122 touched on Monday. It has still lost more than 6 percent in the quarter.
The euro, another casualty in the days after Brexit, fetched$1.1110 after reaching $1.0912 on Friday, its lowest since March.
The yen was on the defensive as risk aversion eased. The dollar was little changed at 102.650 yen after sliding to 99.00 on Friday, a trough last seen in November 2013. For the quarter, the greenback was headed for an 8 percent drop against the yen.
Precious metals rose in part due to a weaker dollar, although the gains also highlighted underlying investor appetite for safe assets amid longer-term financial uncertainty after Brexit.
Silver hovered near a 1-1/2-year high touched Wednesday, while platinum and palladium stood tall after rallying more than 3 percent overnight. Spot gold was nearly flat at $1,316.06 an ounce after rising modestly on Wednesday.
Crude oil prices retraced some of their gains from Wednesday’s sharp rally as fears over strike outages in Norway abated. Brent crude was down 1.2 percent at $50.02 a barrel after jumping more than 4 percent overnight, thanks to a larger-than-expected drawdown in U.S. crude inventories.
Oil has mostly recovered what it lost after the Brexit shock. For the quarter, Brent has risen 26 percent on hopes that declining production in some countries would ease a global glut.
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