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BEIJING: Asian stock markets rose Monday after Wall Street turned in its fifth straight weekly gain and Chinas manufacturing growth held steady.
Benchmarks in Shanghai, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Seoul advanced.
U.S. stocks benefited from Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powells announcement of a strategy change that could keep interest rates low for a long time. The change, dubbed average inflation targeting, could mean rates stay low even if inflation hits the Feds 2% target.
The market continues to run hot after U.S. Fed Chair Powell tipped his hat to a lengthy period of easy Fed policy, said Stephen Innes of AxiCorp in a report.
The Shanghai Composite Index rose 1.1% to 3,441.31 after the Chinese statistics bureau and an industry group reported a survey showed manufacturing grew in August at about the same rate as the previous month.
The Nikkei 225 in Tokyo added 1.9% to 23,329.47, rebounding after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s announcement that he was resigning for health reasons triggered heavy selling on Friday. Hong Kongs Hang Seng advanced 1.4% to 25,780.44. The Kospi in Seoul was little-changed at 2,354.11.
Australias S&P-ASX 200 was 0.2% higher at 6,083.70. New Zealand and Jakarta retreated while Singapore gained.
Global stock markets have recovered most of this years losses despite rising coronavirus infection numbers in the United States, Brazil and some other countries.
Wall Streets benchmark S&P 500 index is at a record high, propelled by big gains for technology stocks investors expect to do well despite the pandemic. But most stocks in the index still are down.
On Friday, the S&P 500 gained 0.7% to 3,508.01. The index gained 3.3% for the week, capping its longest weekly winning streak since December.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied 0.6% to 28,653.87. It returned to positive territory for the year.
The Nasdaq composite climbed 0.6% to a record 11,695.63. Benchmark U.S. crude oil gained 20 cents to $43.17 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract slipped 7 cents on Friday to settle at $42.97. Brent crude, the international standard, rose 34 cents to $46.15 per barrel in London.
The dollar declined to 105.46 yen from Friday’s 105.55. The euro edged down to $1.1913 from $1.1918.
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