Asian stocks hit 10-year high

Most Asian stock markets were higher Wednesday after US shares rose on encouraging jobs data while worries about North Korea and twin hurricane disasters eased.

Asian shares were mostly higher Tuesday, encouraged by optimism on Wall Street as Hurricane Irma weakened and made way for recovery efforts and a North Korean holiday passed without new missile launches.
AP

Asian shares were mostly higher Tuesday, encouraged by optimism on Wall Street as Hurricane Irma weakened and made way for recovery efforts and a North Korean holiday passed without new missile launches.

Asian stocks wobbled on Wednesday but still marked a 10-year peak, cheered by record highs on Wall Street, while shares of Apple Inc.’s suppliers dipped following the release of the latest iPhone.

Futures suggested a downbeat start to the European trading day, with the Eurostoxx 50 down 0.1 percent, DAX futures also down 0.1 percent and FTSE futures 0.2 percent lower.          

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was slightly lower, after earlier poking up to its highest level since October 2007. Australian shares ended fractionally higher and South Korean shares rose 0.2 percent.

On Tuesday, the S&P 500, Dow Jones industrials and Nasdaq Composite all finished at record levels as investors' concerns faded about North Korean tensions as well as the impact of Hurricane Irma. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 0.3 percent to a record 2,496.48. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 0.3 percent to 22,118.86, a fraction of a point higher than its previous record. The Nasdaq composite picked up 0.3 percent, to 6,454.28.  In addition, banks rose for a second day and retailers gained after the Labor Department said numbers of job openings and new hires both grew in July.      

"In the U.S. we had a bit of unwinding of the fear trade that it's been going through and that's flowing through to us as well," said Mathan Somasundaram, a market portfolio strategist with Blue Ocean Equities in Sydney.

U.S. gains were kept in check, however, by a decline in shares of Apple Inc. after it unveiled its newest line of iPhones. Apple fell 0.6 percent but pared some losses in afterhours trade.

The new iPhone's sales will have repercussions beyond Apple for many suppliers as well as its rivals.

Taiwan's benchmark dropped 0.7 percent, as shares of Apple supplier Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world's biggest contract chip maker, dipped 0.5 percent, while Hon Hai Precision Industry was 1.3 percent lower.

In China, Apple-linked stocks such as Zhejiang Crystal Optech tumbled 6.4 percent and Goertek shed 3.7 percent. The blue-chip CSI300 index was slightly up, while the Shanghai Composite Index was flat in afternoon trade.

Japan's Nikkei stock index added 0.5 percent to a one-month high, getting a tailwind as the yen stayed far away for its recent peaks.

Yutaka Miura, a senior technical analyst at Mizuho Securities, said the weaker yen had prompted investors to cover short positions that they took during recent bouts of risk aversion.

"The Nikkei is not rising on fundamentals at the moment, but rather on supply and demand moves," he said.

The dollar inched 0.1 percent lower on the day to 110.11 yen, but remained well above last Friday's 10-month low of 107.32 plumbed when Hurricane Irma loomed and investors braced for the possibility of another missile or nuclear test to mark North Korea's founding day on Sept. 9.

The yen tends to benefit during times of economic and political uncertainty due to Japan's net creditor nation status, and the expectation that Japanese investors would repatriate assets during times of crisis.

Investors remained wary of a flare-up of tensions at any moment on the Korean Peninsula, with U.S. President Donald Trump saying on Tuesday that U.N. sanctions on North Korea this week were a "very small step," and "nothing compared to what ultimately will have to happen" to deal with the country's nuclear program.

North Korea remained defiant over the latest sanctions, vowing to redouble efforts to fight off what it said was the threat of a U.S. invasion.

The euro was up 0.1 percent at $1.1979, while the dollar index was down 0.1 percent at 91.815, holding well above Friday's 2-1/2-year low of 91.011.

Meanwhile, bitcoin skidded 4.8 percent to $3,975.43 on the BitStamp platform, after Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase & Co, said on Tuesday that the crypto-currency "is a fraud" and will blow up.

Bitcoin slid 6.6 percent on Friday, after reports that China was about to shut down local crypto-currency exchanges.

Crude oil futures were mixed after gaining on Tuesday, when OPEC forecast higher demand in 2018 and Russia and Venezuela confirmed their commitment to a production-cutting deal to reduce the global crude glut.

Brent crude slipped 0.2 percent to $54.18 per barrel, while U.S. crude rose slightly to $48.25.

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