Monday, 25 May 2015

Asia stocks extend gains

Asian markets advanced on Monday, continuing a rally at the end of last week, with Tokyo boosted by a weaker yen after the head of the Federal Reserve stuck to her plan to raise interest rates by the year's end.
The euro suffered further losses as Greece warned it did not have enough money to service its debts next month unless it receives the rest of its bailout cash.

Tokyo added 0.54%, Sydney put on 0.73% and Shanghai added 0.50%, while Singapore rose 0.30%.
Hong Kong and Seoul were closed for public holidays.

Fed chief Janet Yellen said on Friday she expects to hike rates from historic lows "at some point this year", warning that a delay could risk overheating the economy. However, she also said there were still weaknesses, including slackness in the job market despite unemployment at 5.4%.

Her comments came two days after minutes of the Fed's April policy board meeting made clear that slow growth in recent months meant it was not expecting a rise before late July.

Adding to the dollar's strength was news from the US Department of Commerce that core consumer prices - which exclude food and energy - jumped 0.3% in April from March, the largest one-month rise in more than two years.

The dollar was at ¥121.57 early Monday, against ¥121.52 in New York and sharply up from 120.71 in Tokyo earlier Friday.

"Inflation is speeding up a little in the US, and we can see the intention to raise rates sometime this year," Shoji Hirakawa, chief equity strategist at Okasan Securities Co in Tokyo said by phone.

"When we consider the US versus Japan, rates will be higher in the States. Japan's rate hikes and tapering will be further into the future."

Japan has for the past two years been embarking on a bond-buying programme that pumps cash into the financial markets - which hits demand for the yen - in a bid to defeat deflation.

The euro fell to $1.0983 and ¥133.63 from $1.1016 and ¥133.86 in US trade as investors grow worried about Greece's ongoing bailout overhaul talks.

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