Hong Kong: Asian stocks rose to a four-month high yesterday, some investors inspired by positive US economic data to pick out bargains, with the cautious shift toward risk reining in yen strength.
Leading European stocks fell 0.4 per cent in early trade.
The yen's yield disadvantage has also been growing this week, following upside surprises in US and Australian economic figures, handing dealers an incentive to join any selloffs of the currency.
"At the end of the day, traders are still focusing on economic developments in the US and debt issues in Europe," said CMC Markets analyst David Taylor in Sydney.
"The key theme is that it is less likely the US will have a double-dip recession."
Overnight, US initial jobless claims fell to a two-month low. China yesterday posted stronger-than-expected import growth in August, indicating a possible rebound in domestic demand, and a 34.4 per cent rise in exports year-on-year.
The Chinese data also supported currencies of major commodity exporters such as Australia, keeping the Aussie dollar on track for a third straight week of gains.
Still, risk taking has not become overwhelming by any stretch. Economists keep ratcheting down US economic forecasts, corporate executives sound cautious and some of Europe's banks may need more capital soon.
Tokyo's Nikkei share average closed 1.6 per cent higher, with Fast Retailing and Canon Inc the biggest lifts to the index. The Nikkei is on its way to its biggest weekly increase since the week of July 11.
The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan edged up 0.1 per cent after earlier hitting the highest since May 4, with the technology sector leading gains.
The index is up nearly 11 per cent in the quarter, on track for the largest gain since the third quarter of 2009.
The S&P 500 index overnight rose 0.5 per cent and broke above its 100-day moving average, a medium-term obstacle, revealing its 200-day moving average only 1 percent away as the next significant barrier.
Investors betting on the yen have grown concerned about the moves in bond spreads that have gone against the Japanese currency. Overnight a lower-than-expected reading of US initial jobless claims pushed up Treasury yields.
Last month economists on average slashed their 2011 US economic growth forecasts by three tenths of a per cent, the biggest single-month downward revision to year ahead predictions in two years, Thomson Reuters Datastream showed.
That has made investors lean heavily in the direction of negative economic news, so that a positive surprise causes them to scramble to cover their bets.
The spread of US 10-year Treasury yields over Japan has widened 6 basis points this week, the biggest weekly gain since July 2010. Australian two-year yields have shot up 22 basis points above same maturity Japanese yields this week, the largest increase since March 2010.
"Of course this could prove to be a false break [particularly given doubts surrounding the fall in initial jobless claims] but we would note US yields appear to have been basing for a number of weeks now," Jonathan Cavenagh, strategist with Westpac in Sydney, said in a note.