Asian shares rise on stronger global risk appetite as oil prices ease By Reuters

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a protective face mask amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, looks at an electronic board displaying Japan’s Nikkei Index outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, September 24, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

By Alun John

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Asian shares rallied on Thursday, taking heart from a late recovery on Wall Street after U.S. politicans appeared near to a temporary deal to avert a federal debt default and as Russia reassured Europe on gas supplies, calming volatile markets.

Oil prices also dropped back from multi-year highs hit a day earlier, having been a major contributor to this week’s equities sell off, while U.S. benchmark Treasury yields and major currencies steadied amid the calmer mood.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.25% in early trade, regaining ground lost in recent days to be little changed on the week.

“Sharp (OTC:) increases in energy prices have clearly contributed to the latest leg up in bond yields, which has been accompanied by weakness in equity markets around the world,” analysts at Capital Economics wrote in a note.

As oil prices came off on Thursday, there were gains in share benchmarks in Korea up 1.3%, Australia up 0.64%, and Hong Kong up 2%.

rose 0.89%, and U.S. stock futures, the , gained 0.42%.

Chinese markets remained closed for a holiday.

dipped 0.34% to $77.17 a barrel, extending a fall from late on Wednesday after hitting a seven-year high of $79.78 earlier that day. was steady at $81.04 per barrel, off its three -year high of $83.47 also hit on Wednesday. [O/R]

The falls followed an unexpected rise in U.S. crude stocks.

Gas prices also fell, a day after Russian leaders indicated that supply to Europe could increase, which contributed to a late rally on Wall Street after declines in European stock markets.

The rose 0.3%, the

Worries the U.S. would default on its debt, have weighed on stocks along with the rising energy prices.

The next U.S. event in focus for global investors is payrolls data due Friday, with investors anticipating that a reasonable figure will mean the U.S. Federal Reserve will begin tapering its massive stimulus programme at its November meeting.

The dollar was steady, not too far from 12 month highs hit last month against a basket of currencies, and held at a 14 month high against the Euro.

The yield on benchmark was 1.5415% off from Wednesday’s three and a half month high of 1.573%.

“Sentiment and momentum are variable, causing shifting risk appetite,” wrote Westpac analysts of US rates.

“Price action is linked to equity market gyrations, a hawkish Fed outlook and fears of stagflation as oil surges and the politics around the debt ceiling threaten the domestic economy.”

was little changed, trading at $1,761.89 per ounce.

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