Asian markets mostly higher following landslide Macron victory in France

Asian shares traded mostly higher on Monday following the landslide victory of Emmanuel Macron in the French polls on Sunday, with the Nikkei share average hitting its highest level since December 2015.

Macron defeated far-right candidate Marine Le Pen in the French presidential election, with the French interior ministry stating that the former had secured 65.1 percent of the vote. Macron, who is 39 years old, will become France’s youngest president.

Market reaction was muted following the results of the French presidential vote, said National Australia Bank Head of FX Strategy Ray Attrill in a Monday morning note, although the euro/dollar bounced significantly.

The common currency hit a six-month high earlier in the session to trade at $1.10 against the dollar but later gave up some its gains. Euro/dollar last traded at $1.0969.

“We do expect that the euro can grind higher in coming weeks and months, NAB FX Strategy’s year-end target is $1.13, partly in anticipation of the European Central Bank now expressing more confidence that downside risks to the euro zone economy and inflation have further receded,” Attrill said.

S&P 500 futures rose 0.2 percent on the back of the news of the Macron victory as trading began for the week.

Asian markets were mostly higher, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 surging 2.18 percent. The Nikkei share average also reached its highest level since December 2015.

South Korea’s benchmark Kospi index added 0.55 percent. Over in Australia, the ASX 200 was higher by 0.57 percent, driven largely by its energy and materials sub-indexes which were up 2.42 percent and 1.28 percent respectively.

Greater Chinese markets were mixed. The Hang Seng Index gained 0.35 percent but the Shanghai Composite and Shenzhen Composite were lower by 0.92 percent and 0.86 percent respectively.

In economic news, April trade data from China reflected that exports grew 8 percent while imports rose 11.9 percent on year in dollar terms. Both figures failed to meet analyst expectations.

The dollar traded at 98.756 against a basket of rival currencies, edging slightly higher compared to the 98.5 handle seen in the previous session. The greenback earlier fetched a seven-week high against the yen but later stabilized to trade at 112.75.

The risk-sensitive Aussie dollar continued its slide against the dollar, trading lower at $0.7394 following the release of trade data from China. The Aussie had traded above the $0.74 handle earlier in the session.

Also in Australia, stocks of Fairfax Media rose 2.59 percent after TPG Capital, a private equity company, made an offer to acquire the media company’s newspapers and online real estate business. Other media companies also saw their shares rise; Nine Entertainment gained 5.92 percent and Ten Network surged 21.59 percent.

On the energy front, oil prices rose on the back of renewed output cut hopes, with U.S. crude gaining 1.41 percent to trade at $46.87 a barrel. Brent crude added 1.49 percent to trade at $49.83. This comes after oil futures sold off last week to register its lowest prices in five months.

Stateside, equities closed higher on Friday, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closing at record levels following the release of strong April jobs data.

Source: CNBC

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