Asian equities rebound on hopes of easing Euro-zone debt crisis

07 Dec 2011 Evaluate

Asian equity markets rebounded in Wednesday morning trades as worries over the rating agency S&P’s warning of mass EU downgrade waned and made way for cautious optimism that Euro-zone policymakers will deliver a comprehensive plan to avert the region's onerous debt crisis at a summit later this week. Barring the Malaysian benchmark, all the indices in the region inched higher as sentiments got supported by reports that European leaders are mulling plans to create a separate bailout fund to supplement the one they have already agreed to. However, the overnight mixed closing on Wall Street failed to give any direction to the markets in the region. Meanwhile Australian GDP expanded at a faster than expected rate in the quarter ended Sept, 2011 on consumer spending and mining-driven investment.

The benchmark in Hong Kong led the upmove in Asian region with gains of around a percent as financial and oil stocks rallied on hopes that slowing inflation will prompt the government to ease monetary policy. Shares on Seoul climbed on European optimism ahead of futures and options expiry.

Shanghai Composite inched up 1.86 points or 0.08% to 2,327.77, Hang Seng amassed 168.25 points or 0.89% to 19,110.48, Jakarta Composite gained 14.10 points or 0.38% to 3,766.78, Nikkei 225 garnered 69.12 points or 0.81% to 8,644.28, Straits Times advanced 15.04 points or 0.55% to 2,764.28, Seoul Composite climbed 15.44 points or 0.81% to 1,918.26 and Taiwan Weighted surged 72.93 points or 1.05% to 7,029.21.

On the flipside only KLSE Composite was down by 5.33 points or 0.36% to 1,475.59.

 

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