Chakshu Roy

The law and short of it


Chakshu Roy

Global Markets: Asian shares rise

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World markets

Asian shares ambled higher on Friday and were on course for a weekly gain of more than 2 percent, their best in two months, after manufacturing surveys from China and the United States raised hopes that the global growth outlook is improving at last.

The euro was also enjoying a positive week, despite data on Thursday pointing to the euro zone sliding into its deepest recession since 2009, with the currency standing up more than 1 percent on last Friday's close on optimism that a funding deal for debt- choked Greece will ultimately be agreed.

Activity was subdued across financial markets on Friday, with a public holiday in Japan and U.S. trading curtailed by the long Thanksgiving weekend.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.4 percent, with shares in South Korea and Hong Kong both posting modest gains while Australian stocks slipped 0.1 percent.

I suspect profit-taking will probably be a dominant factor at play in the market today, said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney.

The MSCI index was up around 2.3 percent on the week, its best weekly performance since mid-September.

Confidence in the global economic outlook got its biggest boost from Thursday's HSBC flash manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) for China, which showed expansion in the factory sector accelerating for the first time in 13 months, broadly lifting riskier assets such as stocks and commodities.

The Chinese data followed a report on Wednesday showing U.S. manufacturing grew in November at its quickest pace in five months, indicating strong economic growth in the fourth quarter.

PMI data on the manufacturing and services sectors in Europe's two biggest economies, Germany and France, added to the better tone, revealing that conditions had not worsened in November, though both economies were still contracting. However, the PMI numbers for the wider euro zone remained extremely weak, pointing to its recession-hit economy shrinking by about 0.5 percent in the current quarter - its sharpest contraction since the first quarter of 2009.

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