Wednesday, September 18, 2013



Emerging markets lead Asia rally after Fed decision






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Stocks and currencies in emerging markets led an Asian rally on Thursday following a surprise decision by the US Federal Reserve to keep its massive stimulus programme intact.
The announcement to hold off winding down its $85 billion a month bond-buying fuelled a buying spree on Wall Street, sending the Dow and S&P 500 to record highs.
And Asia took up the baton on Thursday, with under-pressure developing economies breathing a sigh of relief after suffering a heavy sell-off in August as investors bet on the Fed tightening its monetary policy.
Jakarta surged 4.44%, Manila jumped 3.16%, Mumbai climbed 2.72% and Bangkok rose 3.20%.
There were also gains for Tokyo, which added 1.57%, while Hong Kong jumped 1.71% and Sydney rallied 1.06% to a five-and-a-half-year high.
Seoul, Shanghai and Taipei were closed for public holidays.
In an eagerly awaited announcement, the Fed said it would keep the stimulus in place as it wanted to further gauge the economic impact of public spending cuts and a spike in interest rates in the past four months.
Instead it cut its growth forecast for this year and next as chairman Ben Bernanke warned of possibly "very serious consequences" from a brewing political battle in Washington over a new budget and the US debt ceiling.
"The Federal Reserve's policy is to do whatever we can to keep the economy on course. And so if these actions led the economy to slow, then we would have to take that into account, surely," he told reporters.
He said the bank could still start reducing the bond-buying -- which aims to hold down long-term interest rates -- in the next three months, but only if the economic outlook improves.
"There is no fixed calendar," he said.
Wall Street welcomed the announcement. The Dow rose 0.95%, the S&P 500 climbed 1.22% and the Nasdaq was up 1.01%.
Will foreign cash return?
Most economists had expected the Fed to begin tapering its spending -- with forecasts of a reduction of $5 billion-$15 billion -- after weeks of upbeat data suggested the US economy was at last gaining strength.
But Matthew Sherwood, head of investment market research at Perpetual in Sydney, told Dow Jones Newswires: "It is a pretty patchy recovery, and it is a sign that the US is not ready for a reduced stimulus."
With the prospect of vast sums of cash continuing to be pumped into financial markets, the US dollar sank in New York to 98.13 yen from 99.20 yen on Tokyo earlier in the day, while the euro jumped to $1.3511 from $1.3353.
On Thursday the US picked up slightly against the yen, buying 98.30 yen, but the euro rose to $1.3529. The European single currency also fetched 133.09 against 132.55 yen.
The main beneficiaries of the news, however, were emerging economies, which have suffered a torrid few months on expectations the Fed with begin cutting down its bond-buying.
India's rupee was at 61.80 to the dollar, well up from the record levels above 69.00 seen at the start of September, while the greenback also fetched 30.98 Thai baht, compared with 32.45 baht a few weeks ago.
The dollar fell to 1,069 Korean won, against the 1,150 won level touched over the summer. It also slipped to 11,092 Indonesian rupiah from 11,290 rupiah, although the greenback is still sitting around four-year highs.
Emerging economies have suffered a huge outflow of cash -- sending stock and currencies tumbling -- since Bernanke in May hinted the Fed would begin tapering its bond-buying scheme, which had led to an investment splurge from foreigners looking for higher returns than in the US.
The Fed decision "may foster expectations that capital outflows from (emerging markets) can stop or even reverse," Barclays Capital said in a note, according to Dow Jones Newswires.
"This should be particularly supportive for the currencies and rates markets of countries with higher current account deficits", such as India and Indonesia.
On oil markets, New York's main contract, West Texas Intermediate for October, added 52 cents to $108.59 after surging $2.65 late Wednesday. And Brent North Sea crude for November rose 27 cents to $110.87, following a $2.41 rise in London.
Gold was $1,361.30 an ounce at 0500 GMT compared with $1,300.40 late on Wednesday.
lokesh pgdm 3rd sem 19/09/2013

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