China pulls Asia stocks up for 5th day

Asian equities climbed a fifth consecutive session on Monday, led by Chinese stocks, though the euro turned lower after ratings agency S&P warned that any rollover of Greek’s debt would constitute a default.

China pulls Asia stocks up for 5th day

After two weeks of gains, equities were on a strong footing as fears eased about a sharp slowdown in emerging market giants such as China and a drop in commodity prices like oil boosted demand for risky assets after a rocky first half.

One trader at a Hong Kong-based brokerage said long-only buyers were stepping back into the market, signaling a shift from the prior quarter where institutions were largely on the sidelines and trading volumes on major exchanges stayed anemic.

The Shanghai composite index, which is still down year-to-date, rose 1.6 percent on Monday .SSEC after data last week showed China’s manufacturing growth moderated in June, raising expectations that the economy may not be heading into a sharp slowdown due to excessive tight monetary policy.

A U.S.-based macro fund was also spotted buying into Chinese banks – a sector often considered a proxy for the economy and one which has a large enough weighting to lift the broader market.

The China Enterprises index .HSCE of top mainland firms listed in Hong Kong, the most common way for foreign investors to invest in China, rose 2.2 percent.

“There has been a significant multiple contraction in PE (price-earnings) terms which means that market (China) is emblematic of the overall cheapness of the region,” said Jonathan Garner, head of global emerging markets strategy at Morgan Stanley.

“So we do expect China to do better both in absolute and relative terms in the second half,” he said, adding that the bank is overweight on the materials, energy and financial sectors.

Though headline PMI data dipped, underlying investment trends remain strong and inflation is set to ease in the second half following a moderation in economic activity, Merrill Lynch strategists said.

They expect the Chinese economy to grow by more than 9 percent in 2011 — much higher than a so-called “hard landing” scenario growth of around 7 percent.

Offering yet another ray of optimism for cautious-minded investors was a batch of U.S. manufacturing data that suggested the world’s biggest economy may be recovering strongly from a recent spell of weakness.

Japan’s Nikkei .N225 ended up one percent, briefly rising above 10,000 points level for the first time in two months, while Australian stocks .AXJO gained 0.4 percent.

The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS rose 1.2 percent, touching its highest level since early June, adding to two consecutive weeks of gains.

In Thailand, the baht strengthened and local shares .SETI gained more than 4 percent after the clear majority obtained by the Puea Thai party suggested that possibility of post-election instability looked less likely in the short-term.

Flows data painted a cheery picture. EPFR Global-tracked Emerging Markets Equity Funds snapped a three week outflow streak heading into July with Asia ex-Japan and the diversified Global Emerging Markets (GEM) Equity Funds both taking in over $1 billion while outflows from high yield bond funds slowed.

U.S. markets are shut on Monday for a holiday.

U.S. crude futures were trading above the $95 per barrel mark, holding on to last week’s gains, despite a surprise move by the 28-nation International Energy Agency to release 60 million barrels of oil reserves.

Elsewhere, precious metals like gold and silver eked out meager gains in thin trading.

Reuters

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