GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares cheered by Brexit deal hopes, sterling shines

Published 16/10/2019, 01:47
Updated 16/10/2019, 01:54
© Reuters.  GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares cheered by Brexit deal hopes, sterling shines

* Asian stock markets : https://tmsnrt.rs/2zpUAr4

* MSCI ex-Japan, Nikkei jump on positive Brexit news

* British pound near its highest since May

* EU to determine whether to put deal before EU leaders'

summit

By Swati Pandey

SYDNEY, Oct 16 (Reuters) - Asian shares took off on

Wednesday and sterling held near six-month highs as Britain and

the EU made headway on a Brexit deal ahead of a leaders' summit

though it remained unclear if London could avoid postponing its

scheduled departure on Oct. 31.

Officials and diplomats involved in negotiations over the

acrimonious divorce between the world's fifth-largest economy

and its biggest trading bloc said that differences over the

terms of the split had narrowed significantly. The news lit a fire under European and U.S. equities, which

jumped about 1% on Tuesday. The British pound GBP=D3 rocketed

to $1.28, a level not seen since May 21. It gave back some of

those gains on Wednesday to be last at $1.2759.

The pound has strengthened nearly 5% over the past week as

investors rushed to reprice the prospect of a last-minute Brexit

deal before the end-October deadline.

The positive sentiment extended on Wednesday with MSCI's

broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan

.MIAPJ0000PUS lifting 0.3%.

Japan's Nikkei .N225 jumped 1.7% while Australian shares

.AXJO added 0.9% and South Korea's KOSPI index .KS11 climbed

0.7%.

Stronger-than-expected earnings from major U.S. banks

JPMorgan JPM.N , Citigroup C.N and Wells Fargo WFC.N

further boosted sentiment even as the International Monetary

Fund downgraded its 2019 global growth forecast for a fifth

time. "Equities rallied everywhere supported by another set of

Brexit headlines and as earnings season started in the United

States," JPMorgan analysts wrote in a client note.

"Officials cautioned that talks haven't finished yet and

there could yet be problems in hitting the deadline of midnight

Tuesday," they added.

The EU's chief Brexit negotiator Michael Barnier had been

demanding a legal text of any agreement by midnight U.K. time.

However, the talks were still going on between UK Brexit

negotiator David Frost and the EU's executive European

Commission past midnight in Brussels.

The EU will determine whether a deal is fit to be put to

Thursday's leaders' summit for consideration.

"Watching the UK news channels last night, the arithmetic

for achieving said approval is challenging to say the least,"

analysts at National Australia Bank wrote in a note.

Elsewhere, news on the U.S.-China trade front has been less

encouraging.

Bloomberg reported, citing sources, that China will struggle

to buy $50 billion of U.S. farm goods annually unless it removes

retaliatory tariffs on American products, which would require

reciprocal action by U.S. President Donald Trump.

"It is also pretty apparent that President Xi Jinping is not

going to put his signature to a Phase I deal next month unless

or until the U.S. rescinds the threat of imposing additional

tariffs on China on December 15," NAB analysts said.

In currencies, the Japanese yen JPY= was at the lowest in

2-1/2 months against the greenback as investors flocked to

riskier assets. It was last at 109.82 per dollar.

The dollar itself was under pressure against a basket of six

major currencies with its index .DXY hovering near three-week

lows at 98.288. The euro EUR=D3 was flat at $1.1369.

In commodities, Brent crude LCOc1 added 21 cents to $58.94

a barrel, while U.S. crude CLc1 rose 20 cents to $53.01 after

falling the previous session over fears the unrelenting

U.S.-China trade war would keep squeezing the global economy.

Spot gold was barely changed at $1,481.48 an ounce. XAU=

Asia stock markets https://tmsnrt.rs/2zpUAr4

Asia-Pacific valuations https://tmsnrt.rs/2Dr2BQA

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(Editing by Sam Holmes)

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