By Moxy Ying
For now, Asian stocks are taking their cue from the US
The regional equity gauge marched toward a one-month high on Thursday, after a 2 percent rally in the S&P 500 Index. In the end, the Democrats winning the House wasnt a negative for stocks as some previously feared, at least not for now. And the US dollar has come off quite a bit since last weeks high — another reason for optimism in Asia.
But with the midterms finally out of the way, investors are turning to whats next.
For those in the region, the main question remains of course: what does this mean for the trade war? The hope is that Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping will come up with an agreement, says DBS Group Research, noting that a split Congress should have no bearing on the handling of the negotiations. The two leaders are supposed to have dinner together at a Group of 20 summit later this month.
Then theres earnings, which have been pretty mixed. About half of the companies in the MSCI Asia Pacific Index that have reported results so far this season, have missed projections — a picture reflected on Thursday:
SMIC Falls as Jefferies Cuts Target 25 per cent, Lowers Revenue Outlook Uni-President Slumps After 3Q Results, Citi Cuts Profit Forecast Bandai Namco Surges Most in 4 Years on Big Profit Forecast Beat PetroChina Profit Forecast Raised by Bernstein on Output Growth.
Whats more, since June, analysts have steadily cut their profit estimates for the next year.
Lets not forget the Federal Reserve rate decision due later, which officials are likely to use to ponder broad policy questions. With the expectation there wont be any change to policy, this should be the last meeting before another rate increase in December, and the last without a press conference. Fed tightening hasnt helped Asia this year, with the regions emerging markets feeling the bulk of the pain as their currencies sank and foreigners withdrew money from equity funds.
Here is some country-specific news for the region:
The Philippine economy showed resilience, even though growth of 6.1 percent in the third quarter missed economist projections. Its stock market pared a slide of as much as 1.2 percent. New Zealands central bank left the official cash rate at a record low and signaled the chances of an interest-rate cut are waning as a tight labor market and growing economy fan faster inflation. The nations benchmark equity gauge pared gains of as much as 0.9 percent. India is celebrating the Diwali holiday, and its market will stay closed after an hour of auspicious trading Wednesday.
Stock-Market Summary
Japans Topix index up 1.9 per cent; Nikkei 225 up 2 per cent Hong Kongs Hang Seng Index up 1 per cent; Hang Seng China Enterprises up 1.2 per cent; Shanghai Composite up 0.6 per cent Taiwans Taiex index up 0.4 per cent South Koreas Kospi index up 1.4 per cent; Kospi 200 up 1.5 per cent Australias S&P/ASX 200 up 0.5 per cent; New Zealands S&P/NZX 50 up 0.5 per cent Singapores Straits Times Index up 0.9 per cent; Malaysias KLCI up 0.4 per cent; Philippine Stock Exchange down 0.4 per cent; Jakarta Composite up 0.5 per cent; Thailands SET up 0.7 per cent; Vietnams VN Index up 0.5 per cent
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