Asian stocks jump on US stimulus, Japanese Nikkei at 29-year high by Reuters


© Reuters. A man with a protective face mask walks in front of a stock exchange outside a broker in Tokyo

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Asian equities jumped on Tuesday, with Japanese equities reaching a 29-year high, in hopes of expanding a long-awaited US pandemic relief package and a Brexit trade deal supporting investment risk appetite .

has jumped 0.9% to its highest since March 1991, while Australian equities climbed 0.7% and futures rose for the additional 0.3%.

The U.S. House of Representatives previously voted to increase incentive payments to qualified Americans to $ 2,000 from $ 600, and is sending the measure to the Senate for a vote.

While it is not clear how the measure will fare in the Senate, President Donald Trump on Sunday signed a $ 2.3 billion pandemic bill, which included payments of $ 600, shares on Wall Street on Sunday. sent to peak overnight as it raised optimism about economic growth. repair. ()

“With Brexit … and the US stimulus in the rearview mirror, there is a sense of relief that we have avoided the various worst-case scenarios,” said Stephen Innes, Axi’s chief global market strategist, a broker.

The demand for more risky assets has kept the US dollar, often considered a ‘safe haven’, on the back foot. It fell by 0.02% against a basket of major currencies.

The dollar short was recently a popular trade and calculations by Reuters based on data released by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Monday indicated that it could persist. Short positions on the dollar increased to $ 26.6 billion in the week ended December 21, the highest in three months.

Sterling softened to $ 1.3462 as investors continued to make gains in the currency following the confirmation last week of a trade deal between the UK and the EU that was widely expected.

A sluggish dollar boosted gold prices, which rose 0.4% to $ 1,788.76 per ounce. [GOL/]

Oil prices took a hit after falling overnight over concerns that new travel restrictions at the back of the COVID-19 pandemic would weaken demand for fuel, and because the prospect of a greater supply would slow prices. [O/R]

was 0.48% higher at $ 47.85 a barrel.

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