Vaccine hope, easing of lockdowns fuel Asian stocks rally

Hopes for a vaccine to treat coronavirus and a further easing of lockdown measures around the world spurred a rally on Asian markets Tuesday as investors tracked a surge across Europe and Wall Street.

A half-a-trillion-dollar Franco-German plan to support the European Union economy also lifted confidence, while Australian investors brushed off news that China had imposed massive tariffs on barley imported from the country. While the number of infected people is fast approaching five million and more than 300,000 have died, the rates are slowing enough to allow governments to begin opening up their economies after months of economically devastating shutdowns.

Investors are eyeing a gradual return to some semblance of normal in key markets, with major tourist attractions in Italy and Greece reopening, top-tier football back in Germany and the “Big Three” Detroit automakers resuming manufacturing. But the big news Monday was US biotech firm Moderna reporting “positive interim” results in early testing of a vaccine candidate, with some analysts suggesting that if all goes well it could be in use by the end of the year.

All three main indexes on Wall Street surged between 2.4 and 3.9 percent, with airlines and other tourism-linked firms — which have been battered by the lockdowns — soaring. And Asia-based carriers were enjoying healthy buying on Tuesday. AirAsia jumped six percent in Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific was up more than four percent and Qantas rose almost five percent. Regional stock markets were also well up.

Tokyo went into the break 1.9 percent higher, while Hong Kong, Sydney and Singapore were all up more than two percent. Seoul, Manila, Jakarta and Taipei were more than one percent higher. There were also gains in Wellington, Kuala Lumpur and Shanghai.

“The extraordinary policy support, both monetary and fiscal, is combining with greater optimism of an economic rebound,” said AxiCorp’s Stephen Innes. “Compared to previous downturns that were more multi-faceted and ostensibly more difficult to unwind, the removal of a single recessionary input (the virus) via a vaccine or more effective treatment can pave the way for fast recovery in output.”

Traders were also taking heart from a proposal by France and Germany for a 500 billion euro ($542 billion) fund to finance the recovery of the European Union economy, with the cash going to “worst-hit sectors and regions” in the struggling bloc. The plan sent the euro surging Monday and it managed to hold on to most of the gains in Asia. The upbeat mood also saw higher-yielding, riskier currencies rise against the dollar, with the Australian and New Zealand dollars both up more than one percent, while the South Korean won was up 0.7 percent. And with people now being allowed out of their homes, oil prices continue to rise, with WTI up about 75 percent this month and Brent around 40 percent higher.

National Australia Bank analyst Tapas Strickland said: “The key question from here is can the rally in risk sentiment be sustained? It is possible with more reports of countries/US states easing containment restrictions. “There is also growing evidence that the global economy troughed in mid-April with high frequency data such as Apple/Google mobility pointing to a pick-up in activity. Sentiment indicators are also now starting to rebound.”

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