Wednesday, 16 March 2016

Asia markets mostly up on Fed, Nikkei falls on stronger yen

Source: CNBC

Asian markets opened higher on Thursday as investors welcomed more clarity on the Federal Reserve's policy outlook.
Most Asian markets advanced Thursday as investors cheered new clarity from the Federal Reserve and a rise in oil prices, but Japan shares lost ground as the yen strengthened.
The Fed left rates unchanged at between 0.25 percent and 0.5 percent at its March meeting, but it cut its projection for the number of 2016 rate hikes from four to two, and projected just two hikes in 2017. Uncertainty over how many times the Fed would hike rates this year has weighed on markets since the central bank raised them for the first time in almost nine years in December.


"This was far more dovish than markets had expected, resulting in sharp rallies in commodities, emerging markets and commodity-related currencies," Angus Nicholson, market strategist at spreadbetter IG, said in a note Thursday.
Japan's Nikkei 225 index fell 0.72 percent, extending its fall over the previous two sessions, as the yen strengthened against the dollar and Japan's February exports falling for the fifth consecutive month. A stronger yen typically weighs on Japan's export-heavy market.
The dollar broadly lost ground after the Fed decision, causing the yen to strengthen. At 1:36 p.m. SIN/HK time, the dollar was fetching 112.04 yen, down from levels around 113.70 yen before the decision. A stronger yen tends to be a negative for Japanese stocks.

Across the Korean Strait, the Kospi was 0.93 percent higher. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index also gained 1.04 percent.
Chinese markets traded higher; with the Shanghai composite up 1 percent and the Shenzhen composite rising 3.02 percent in Asian trade.
Australia's S&P/ASX 200 closed up 0.96 percent, or 49.17 points, at 5,168.2, buoyed by the energy subindex's 2.75 percent rise and the materials sector's 2.32 percent gain.

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