Asian stocks rose on Thursday, following Wall Street's tech rally. Japan's Nikkei 225 surged 3%, while Chinese markets continued to struggle.
Asian stock markets opened higher on Thursday, tracking gains on Wall Street fuelled by a tech rally.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 jumped 3% in early trading, while the Chinese market remained struggling.
A pause in the yen’s strengthening gave a boost to exporters, though BOJ policy board member Naoki Tamura said the bank will need to raise its benchmark rate to at least 1% by the end of the projection period.
Expectations that the yen may strengthen further have prompted Wall Street to recommend unwinding currency hedges on Japanese shares that have outperformed many regional peers.
UBS raised its year-end yen forecast to 145 per dollar from 160. However, the bank has downgraded Japanese stocks to underweight in local-currency terms, citing risks the currency’s strength poses to earnings forecasts.
The central bank is set to leave rates unchanged at its next meeting this month, but more than half the economists polled by Reuters last month predict further tightening by the year's end.
BofA Securities says a bigger part of Japanese earning growth is now being determined by a company’s ability to hike prices in an inflationary environment, rather than by a weaker yen.
The benchmark index rallied from the low around 35,100 but the double top pattern signalled further loss ahead. The bearish bias will not likely be reverse until we see a break above 50 SMA.
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