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Nikkei hits 6-week high as risk appetite improves

This article was posted on Dec 26, 2008 and is filed under Market News

Hong Kong: Asia stocks edged up on Friday and Japan’s Nikkei average posted its highest close in six weeks as investors bet a raft of government measures will help the global economy recover next year.
The dollar and yen slipped as portfolio managers shifted some funds into riskier assets while preparing to close their books for the year.

Japan’s Nikkei average pushed up 1.6% as some battered shares such as Toyota Motor Corp got a lift from such portfolio window-dressing despite data showing a record plunge in industrial production in November. Japanese governments bonds climbed, driving the 20-year yield to a five-year low, on regular month-end buying from pension funds and other data pointing to a return of deflation next year.

Investors have largely shrugged off the array of bleak reports showing the financial crisis dealt a severe blow to the global economy at the end of 2008, instead looking ahead to see how government efforts to revive growth will work next year. “Past experience shows that stock prices tend to gain around the year-end and the start of the year on hopes for the coming year. But it’s not as if investors can keep buying this time around as the outlook for the economy is murky,” said Yutaka Miura, a senior technical analyst at Shinko Securities. Japanese Economics Minister Kaoru Yosano told Reuters in an interview that Tokyo may take more fiscal spending measures if economic conditions worsen further, on top of a stimulus package totalling $829 billion.

Trading activity was light with many financial markets closed following Christmas Day. Markets in Hong Kong and Australia were closed. Many markets in Europe will remain closed, even as US markets will reopen. The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 0.1% but was down 2% this week and 55% this year, on track for the biggest yearly loss in its 20-year history.

Taiwan’s TAIEX index inched up 0.3% after the government pledged to help flat-screen television makers in the latest effort to prop up the country’s tech industry. AU Optronics, the world’s No. 3 LCD maker, jumped 2.5%.South Korea’s KOSPI fell 0.9% on worries that companies would issue slim year-end dividends. The dollar and yen dipped against most major currencies. The euro edged up 0.3% to $1.4050, while single currency rose 0.3% to 127.10 yen. As the dollar slipped, gold edged up $4 an ounce to $848.

source: Livemint

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