Asian markets extend rally as China data lifts optimism

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AFP, Hong Kong :
Asian markets rallied Monday, building on last week’s healthy gains with investors buoyed by optimism over China-US trade talks and forecast-busting Chinese factory data.
Top negotiators from China and the US flagged progress in last week’s discussions in Beijing on the tariffs row, with another round slated for this week in Washington.
While there have been few details, the general view on trading floors is that the economic superpowers are heading towards a deal that will end a long-running spat that helped sink global markets towards the end of last year.
Confidence an agreement will be reached helped overcome concerns about the world economy that saw a sharp sell-off in equities at the start of last week.
A positive lead from Wall Street was picked up in Asia, with Tokyo ending the morning 2.2 percent higher, Hong Kong adding 1.6 percent and Shanghai climbing 2.3 percent. Sydney and Singapore each jumped 0.8 percent, while Seoul piled on 1.2 percent, with Taipei and Wellington also in the green.
The rises were supported by a sharp jump in an index of Chinese
manufacturing activity, which soothed concerns about the world’s number two
economy and a key driver of the global economy.
– EU patience ‘running out’ –
The Purchasing Managers Index for March showed growth in the sector for the
first time in four months and was far better than expected.
“The manufacturing print… will go a long way to allaying slowdown fears
about China, at least in the short-term as the US-China trade talks move back
to Washington this Wednesday,” said OANDA senior market analyst Jeffrey
Halley.
Attention once again returns to Britain, where Prime Minister Theresa May
failed on Friday to pass her Brexit deal through parliament, stoking
uncertainty with just over a week before the deadline for leaving the
European Union.
With MPs still unable to agree on a way forward there are fears the country
will crash out of the bloc without a deal, putting pressure on the pound.
Lawmakers will hold a series of votes Monday to try to find a majority-
backed plan to end the current crisis, though European Commission President
Jean-Claude Juncker has said the EU is “running out” of patience as the saga
plods on.
“Brexit is a mess, and sterling traders are getting bored with the
continued political point scoring that has plagued the whole process,” said
James Hughes, chief market analyst at AxiTrader.
“The closer we get to the proposed deadline of April 12 the more volatility
we will surely see.”

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