Asian stocks were up in hesitant trade on  Thursday, as many investors sought shelter in  safe-haven assets such as the Japanese yen and  government debt as they braced for Britain’s  vote on its fate in  the European Union.  Sterling, the cleanest way to play the  “Brexit” trade, climbed to a six-month  high against the dollar, cementing an impressive 6  percent rise since last week as investors squared  short positions ahead of the referendum later in  the day.    While two opinion polls published late on  Wednesday, a few hours before voters were due to  begin to cast their votes, showed the  “Remain” camp nudging ahead in the  closely divided campaign, trading activity in  Asian hours remained erratic, thin and  cautious.    MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific  shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS rose 0.2  percent. Many markets in Asia were flat to  slightly negative. Among the big losers were the  Indonesian stock market .JKSE while Japan’s  Nikkei .N225 led gainers.    Angus Nicholson, market analyst at IG in  Melbourne, said that “markets are still  incredibly nervous and some sharp market moves are  likely over the next 24 hours.”    Various market volatility indicators edged  higher in the run up to the referendum. A  volatility gauge for the Hong Kong stock market  .VHSI has climbed to more than 25 compared to  around 18 at end of December while the more  popular VIX index .VIX approached its highest  levels seen this year.    Investors remained largely on the sidelines  ahead of the referendum as a closely fought vote  meant any large positions taken before the outcome  was vulnerable to being stopped out. A Bank of  America Merill Lynch fund manager poll last week  found investors’ cash levels at their  highest since November 2001.                           Some investors such as George Soros expect the  value of the British pound to decline by as much  as 15 percent from current levels in the event of  a British exit from the EU.    On Thursday, sterling GBP= was changing hands  at $    1.4796, after hitting $    1.4847, its  highest against the dollar in 2016.     The demand for the perceived safe-haven yen  remained broadly intact with the dollar adding  just 0.2 percent to 104.60 yen JPY=, while the  euro gained 0.6 percent to 118.64 yen EURJPY=.                           “It will be hard for the market to move  until the poll results are released. The pound  obviously will take center stage. But other  European currencies and particularly dollar/yen  also bear watching as the pair will reflect swings  in risk sentiment,” said Shin Kadota, chief  Japan FX strategist at Barclays in Tokyo.    Before the vote, exchanges and market  regulators moved in to tighten risk management  systems. Singapore’s stock exchange .SGXL.SI  said it has raised the amount of cash firms must  pledge to cover trading positions while central  banks stood by to pump in emergency cash.    The euro rose 0.4 percent to $    1.13405 EUR=,  while the dollar index, which tracks the greenback  against a basket of six rival currencies, slipped  0.1 percent to 93.479 .DXY.    (Latest Reuters news on the referendum,  including full multimedia coverage:)                        Government bonds held firm with ten-year  Japanese bonds yielding 0.13 percent while the  spread between ten and two-year debt holding firm  at 95 basis points.    Crude oil prices rose after settling down more  than 1 percent on Wednesday after the U.S.  government reported a smaller-than-expected  inventory drawdown. [O/R]    Brent LCOc1 added 0.8 percent to $    50.28 a  barrel after shedding 1.5 percent on Wednesday,  while U.S. crude CLc1 was up 0.9 percent at $     49.54 after giving up 1.4 percent in the previous  session.    Spot gold XAU= plumbed a two-week low of $     1,260.36 an ounce and was last down 0.4 pct at $     1,261.24.       (Additional reporting by Lisa Twaronite in  TOKYO; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
Wednesday, June 22, 2016
Asian stocks wobble ahead of Brexit vote, sterling jumps – Reuters
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
No comments:
Post a Comment