Shares face weekly losses, sterling steadies as Brexit risk seen ebbing
Asian shares rose on Friday but were set for weekly losses as investors favoured safe haven assets because of fears that Britain will vote to quit the European Union, though the killing of a pro-EU politician was seen swaying sentiment toward the "Remain" camp.
European
shares are also poised for a strong start, with financial spreadbetter
IG expecting Britain's FTSE 100 to open 0.8 percent higher and Germany's
DAX to start the day up 1.1 percent.
Campaigning
for Thursday's referendum, which overshadowed this week's U.S. and
Japanese central bank meetings, was temporarily halted after a British
member of parliament, Jo Cox, was shot and fatally wounded on Thursday.
The
recently volatile pound rose 0.4 percent to $1.4255 with analysts
noting the pro-membership MP's death could generate sentiment in favour
of remaining in the EU.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was up 0.6 percent, but was down nearly 2.7 percent for the week.
China's
CSI 300 index advanced 0.5 percent, and the Shanghai Composite added
0.4 percent. That helped them shrink losses for the week to 1.7 percent
and 1.5 percent respectively.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 0.5 percent, but is set for a weekly decline of 4.3 percent.
Wall
Street marked gains overnight, with the benchmark S&P 500 index
erasing sharp intra-day losses to snap a five-day losing streak.
"Investors
are considering the risk of Brexit to have been lowered, both by
reports that European hedge funds believe Brexit will not get up and,
secondly, that the shooting (of Cox) has played against the Brexit vote," said Angus Gluskie, managing director of White Funds Management in Sydney.
Japan's
Nikkei stock index closed up 1.1 percent, taking back some of its steep
losses. But Japanese shares still shed more than 6 percent in a week in
which the safe-haven yen soared after the Bank of Japan decided against
delivering additional stimulus to counter waning inflation and weak
global growth.
"Continued inaction by the BOJ
in the face of these risks only reinforces the market's suspicions that
the central bank is running out of policy options, feeding back into a
stronger yen," HSBC economist Izumi Devalier said in a note.
Japanese
Finance Minister Taro Aso said on Friday that he was deeply concerned
about "one-sided, rapid and speculative moves" seen in the currency
market and would respond if necessary to ensure stability in currencies.
The
dollar clawed back some lost ground on Friday, rising 0.1 percent to
104.36 yen, but it was still down 2.4 percent for a week in which it
dropped as low as 103.555. That was its deepest low since August 2014.
The
dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major
peers, also slipped 0.1 percent, and is set for a weekly decline of the
same magnitude.
The euro added 0.3 percent to
117.395 yen, but was still down 2.4 percent for the week. On Thursday,
it plumbed a three-year low of 115.51.
The Federal
Reserve also stood pat on policy on Wednesday, though it signalled it
still planned to raise rates twice in 2016. But it also downgraded its
economic view, and said slower growth would slow the pace of future
monetary policy tightening.
Crude oil prices rose for the first time in seven days as Brexit concerns ebbed, after losses of almost 4 percent overnight.
U.S.
crude rose almost 1 percent to $46.66 a barrel, and Brent crude climbed
1.4 percent to $47.85. Both recorded losses of about 10 percent over
the previous six sessions. [O/R]
Gold also
advanced 0.4 percent to $1,283.33 an ounce following wild swings
overnight. Spot gold surged to a near-two-year high of $1,315.55, but
closed down 2.8 percent from that level as markets bet on growing
support for Britain to remain in the EU. It is set to rise 0.8 percent
this week, its third consecutive weekly gain.
Shares face weekly losses, sterling steadies as Brexit risk seen ebbing
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