Do Asian Stocks Climb as Won to Aussie Jump?

Source: Bloomberg

Source: Bloomberg

According to Bloomberg, Asian stocks climbed a fifth day, with the benchmark gauge trading near a five-year high, while emerging-market currencies strengthened on speculation the Federal Reserve will hold off cutting monetary stimulus until next year. Australia’s dollar jumped after inflation data.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.3 percent by 10 a.m. in Tokyo after earlier touching the highest level since June 2008. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPA) futures dropped 0.1 percent after the gauge rose in New York. South Korea’s won climbed to the strongest level since January and Malaysia’s ringgit snapped a three-day decline. The Australian dollar strengthened to hold at a 4 1/2-month high. Copper retreated 0.4 percent after gaining yesterday while silver rose a seventh day.

Barclays Plc pushed out their estimate for the start of Fed tapering to March from December after data delayed because of the U.S. government shutdown showed employers added 148,000 workers in September, below the 180,000 increase projected in a Bloomberg survey. The 16-day shutdown cut U.S. growth and cost jobs, according to an economic aide to President Barack Obama. China’s Treasury holdings fell to a six-month low in August and Australian inflation quickened more than expected last quarter.

“The key takeaway for the Fed from the September U.S. non-farm payrolls is that the U.S. economy is in no shape to withstand a reduction in monetary stimulus,” Matthew Sherwood, head of investment markets research in Sydney at Perpetual Investments, which manages about $25 billion, said in an e-mail. “Expectations of tapering delays will continue to support markets.”

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Malaysia’s Economy at Risk with Growing Consumer Debt

Malaysia’s consumer debt is at 76.6 per cent of its GDP and some economists believe that the growing consumer credit could rock the country’s economy.

Malaysia’s consumer debt is at 76.6 per cent of its GDP and some economists believe that the growing consumer credit could rock the country’s economy.

Malaysia’s consumer debt is at 76.6 per cent of its GDP and some economists believe that the growing consumer credit — where each ringgit of growth nearly matches an extra ringgit of consumer debt — could rock the country’s economy, the Financial Times (FT) reported today.

The country’s household debt ratio is the highest in the region, the influential daily reported, citing Johanna Chua, an economist at Citigroup, who believed this makes the Southeast Asia’s third largest economy vulnerable, especially as lower-income households bear a greater share of the overall debt.

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