Asian stocks at two week high as Trump leaves hospital

European equities looked set to follow, with Euro Stoxx 50 futures rising

Traders work on the floor of the Dow Industrial Average at the New York Stock Exchange.
Traders work on the floor of the Dow Industrial Average at the New York Stock Exchange.

Asian stock markets advanced to a more than two-week high on Tuesday after US president Donald Trump was discharged from hospital following treatment for Covid-19, and as prospects for a fresh US stimulus package appeared to brighten.

European equities looked set to follow, with Euro Stoxx 50 futures rising 0.25 per cent, German DAX futures up 0.2 per cent, and FTSE futures edging up 0.06 per cent.

Wall Street had earlier rallied on Trump’s improving health, and futures indicated that European stocks were set to follow suit.

Gold, bonds and the dollar suffered losses amid the improving risk appetite, while oil extended strong overnight gains.

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Trump returned to the White House on Monday after a three-night hospital stay and said he felt “real good”, though one of his doctors cautioned that he may not be out of the woods yet.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.67 per cent to a two and a half week-high, with Hong Kong was among the leaders climbing 0.73 per cent. Japan’s Nikkei added 0.56 per cent.

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin spoke by phone for about an hour and were preparing to talk again Tuesday, continuing their work towards a deal on coronavirus relief spending.

As well as Trump’s health, “there is also some market attention on whether the US Congress will pass the extra stimulus bill,” said Tai Hui, Chief Asia market strategist, JP Morgan Asset Management

“If we do see some form of stimulus coming through, I think the market will take it in a positive light as much of the important support from the previous round has expired,” he said.

S&P 500 futures were fairly flat after the best daily gain on the S&P 500 index in a month overnight.

China’s markets remained closed for a holiday.

The optimism hit gold and other safe haven assets.

Spot gold fell 0.1 per cent to $1,911 per ounce, after hitting a two-week peak on Monday, and US gold futures were down 0.21 per cent.

Bond markets also joined in, as a sharp selloff in US bonds on Monday carried over into Asia on Tuesday.

Benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond futures fell to a one-month low in the steepest drop in more than five weeks and South Korean yields jumped.

However, analysts said selling in other Asian markets was more subdued than in the US market because regional investors are beginning to price in a victory for Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden in the November 3rd election.

“The selloff in US yields is more driven by Trump getting out of hospital,” said DBS rates strategist Duncan Tan in Singapore.

“That narrows some of the uncertainties around the election process. In the short term, at the very least, it removes the tail risk of having to consider if Trump or Biden is unable to participate in the election.”

US 10-year yields were steady at 0.7718 per cent.

In currency markets, the dollar was under pressure on other majors apart from the yen, as higher yields can often draw flows from Japan.

The dollar gained on the yen to reach 105.62 yen, not far short of its highest levels in three weeks.

The typically risk friendly Australian dollar gained briefly after the Reserve Bank of Australia left rates on hold, as expected, but later fell back, and the potential for further monetary easing capped gains.

Oil jumped more than 5 per cent overnight and edged higher still in Asia, supported by the Trump news and a supply squeeze as a strike shut six Norwegian offshore oil and gas fields.

US crude last stood at $39.39 a barrel, up 0.43 per cent and, Brent crude rose 0.48 per cent to $41.49. – Reuters