Asian markets in the green with Comey’s FBI dismissal

Equities in Asia were mostly in the green on Wednesday as investors digest the dramatic dismissal of FBI Director James Comey in the U.S. and follow the inauguration of liberal candidate Moon Jae-in after his win in the South Korean presidential election.

Official results reflected that Moon, a candidate from the Democratic Party of Korea, had won 41.1 percent of the vote, according to Reuters. Moon will take on the presidency after the ouster of former South Korean President Park Geun-hye was removed from office on corruption charges.

Political developments in the U.S. are also likely to weigh as FBI Director James Comey was fired by U.S. President Donald Trump on the recommendation of Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index was up 0.25 percent while the Kospi edged down by 0.55 percent following Moon’s election victory.

“The actual Korean market is really being driven by Samsung today so I wouldn’t read too much into that in terms of the general sentiment,” Crestone Wealth Management CIO David Sokulsky told CNBC, adding that the election result was a positive development for Korean markets.

The ASX 200 reversed earlier losses to gain 0.73 percent as investors digested the release of the federal budget yesterday after the market close.

Markets in greater China were in the green, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index up 0.85 percent. The Shanghai Composite was also higher, trading higher by 0.26 percent, while the Shenzhen Composite added 0.346 percent.

Markets in Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia were closed for the Vesak Day public holiday.

In currency news, the dollar weakened against a basket of rivals after three consecutive sessions of gains to trade at 99.396. The move lower came after Trump’s surprise dismissal of FBI Director Comey. The dollar also softened against the yen, trading at 113.74 at 11:53 am HK/SIN. Dollar/yen breached the 114 level earlier in the session.

The Aussie dollar strengthened slightly against the dollar to trade at $0.736, but still off levels around $0.74 seen last week.

“With iron ore, (Australia’s) chief export, having shed an astonishing 47.3 percent over 36 sessions then the Australian dollar has done well to remain above $0.73 until now,” ThinkMarkets Senior Market Analyst Matt Simpson said in a note.

With the Federal Reserve likely to raise interest rates in June, the Aussie could break below $0.70 if traders realize a third rate hike is on the cards, Simpson told CNBC.

The Australian government forecast an A$7.4 billion ($5.4 billion) surplus for fiscal year 2020/21 and announced it would be raising taxes on banks in its bid to “re-set” the Australian budget yesterday.

Shares of major Australian banks fell more than 1 percent in early trade following the news of the bank levy but later reversed those losses. Westpac was up 0.36 percent, Commonwealth Bank was higher by 0.24 percent and National Australia Bank was 0.49 percent higher.

Meanwhile, oil prices edged up after falling 1.2 percent in the previous session. Brent futures added 0.57 percent to trade at $49.01 a barrel and U.S. crude was 0.72 percent higher at $46.21.

In economic news, China CPI data for the month of April rose 1.2 percent on year. This was higher than the 1.1 percent projected by analysts, Reuters reported. PPI gained 6.4 percent compared to the 6.9 percent forecast.

The Bank of Japan will also be releasing a summary of opinions at its most recent policy meeting later in the day.

Stateside, equities were lower on the back of comments from North Korea indicating the country would continue with its nuclear tests.

Source: CNBC

Leave a comment