Asian stocks gained early on Monday as rising  expectations of Britain voting to remain in the  European Union lifted risk sentiment and the pound  jumped against its peers.     MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific  shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS gained 0.4  percent.    Japan’s Nikkei .N225 climbed 1.5 percent,  helped by a retreat in the recently bullish yen.  Australian stocks  added 0.3 percent and South  Korea’s Kospi .KS11 rose 1 percent.    Three British opinion polls ahead of the EU  membership referendum on June 23 showed the  ‘Remain’ camp recovering some  momentum, although the overall picture remained  one of an evenly split electorate.    Global markets, buffeted this month by Brexit  woes, had  a breather at end of last week from a  three-day suspension in British campaigning  following the fatal attack on lawmaker Jo Cox, a  strong supporter of Britain staying in the EU.    “It is hard to think the market’s  calmer tone to end last week is going to be an  ongoing theme this week, particularly as Brexit  campaigning and the release of opinion polls has  resumed again,” wrote strategists at  ANZ.                       “To be fair, the sad murder of UK  politician Jo Cox may see the rhetoric from both  camps get toned down somewhat. But markets will  still, no doubt, swing about with movements in  opinion polls, just as they did last  week.”    The pound meanwhile climbed 1.4 percent to $     1.4573 GBP=D4, extending a recovery from last  week’s two-month trough of $    1.4013. It  jumped 1.9 percent to 152.50 yen GBPJPY=R, pulling  well away from a three-year trough of 145.34 set  on Thursday. [FRX/]    The safe-haven yen, which had soared to a  22-month high of 103.555 per dollar last week on  Brexit woes, pulled back.                       The dollar was up 0.5 percent at 104.650 yen  JPY=. The euro rose 0.5 percent to $    1.1336  EUR=.    The Australian dollar, seen as a rough measure  of risk sentiment, was up 0.4 percent at $     0.7422 AUD=D4 to put further distance between a  two-week trough of $    0.7286 touched late last  week.    The dollar index .DXY touched an 11-day low of  93.696 early on Monday as the greenback gave back  ground against most of its major peers, apart from  the yen.                       Dovish comments from St. Louis Fed President  James Bullard on Friday also weighed on the U.S.  currency.    In commodities, crude oil prices extended gains  as easing Brexit worries and a weaker dollar  helped the commodity after six straight days of  declines. [O/R]    U.S. crude CLc1 gained 0.6 percent to $     48.27 a barrel and Brent crude LOc1 was up 0.55  percent at $    49.44 per barrel.     (Reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro; Editing by  Eric Meijer)
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Asia stocks gain as Brexit fears ebb slightly, pound surges – Reuters
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