International Finance: Hong Kong shares extend rally, yen climbs further: markets wrap

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Hong Kong shares led gains across Asian equity markets on Wednesday and US and European stock futures rose in a sign of growing risk appetite. The dollar retreated against major currencies and the yen strengthened.

The Hang Seng index traded as much as 2% higher to levels not seen since July, helped by a jump of more than 6% for Alibaba Group Holding shares following news that Ant Group, in which the e-commerce giant holds a stake, wonShares in mainland China edged higher and equity benchmarks in Australia and South Korea rose. European equity futures gained alongside contracts for the S&P 500 after the US index fell in Tuesday trade. Japanese equities ran against the grain to fall about 1%.

The yen inched higher following efforts by the Bank of Japan to depress yields on government debt. The dollar fell against all G10 currencies, led by the Australian dollar, in a further signal of investor support for the Chinese economy. The Australian 10-year yield fell as much as 11 basis points and the 10-year Treasury yield steadied after its biggest decline in more than a month. The price of oil traded in and out of negative territory after the biggest fall in more than a month in the prior session.

Recession concerns lingered, with former New York Federal Reserve president William Dudley saying that an imminent slowdownwhile investors continue to mull the impact the central bank’s tightening will have on the economy. They’ll be paying attention to the jobs report this week, as softening in the labour market remains the Fed’s focus.

“What worries the markets going into the year is how deep the recession is likely to be,” Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA, said on Bloomberg Television. “I think very few people believe we will miss a recession altogether, especially when we have such an inverted yield curve and now are expected to fall into an earnings recession.”

 

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