Asian shares jump on "very good" trade talks, pound edges up

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Asian shares jumped on Friday after US President Donald Trump said he would meet with China's top trade negotiator, stirring hopes for an
agreement, while sterling resumed its climb amid optimism over a possible Brexit deal. European shares were mostly expected to continue the
rally
Pan-region Euro Stoxx 50 futures rose 0.26 per cent to 3,494 and German DAX futures gained 0.29 per cent to 12,209
FTSE futures were down 0.43 per cent at 7,142.5 early in the day. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan advanced 1.3
per cent on Friday afternoon in Asia
S-P e-mini futures added 0.45 per cent. Australian shares climbed 0.9 per cent, while Japan's Nikkei stock index gained 1.1 per cent
Chinese blue-chips were up nearly 1 per cent after a slow start. The bullish market mood came after a first day of trade talks between top
US and Chinese negotiators, characterised by Trump as "very, very good." A White House official said the talks had gone "probably better
than expected" and a US Chamber of Commerce official briefed by both sides raised the possibility of a currency agreement this week. Even
before Trump's comments, hopes for an agreement helped to lift US markets
The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.57 per cent, the S-P 500 gained 0.64 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.6 per cent. But while
optimism around trade talks helped to drive a "classic risk-on session" overnight, the lack of runaway enthusiasm reflected broader investor
caution, said Matt Simpson, senior market analyst at GAIN Capital in Singapore
"We know that it's just a few words from Trump." Further positive developments in trade talks could boost markets on Monday, but low
expectations for a deal mean that the lack of an agreement would not "necessarily (be) the end of the world for risk," he added. Analysts at
National Australia Bank said freezing tariffs at current levels would be unlikely to reverse the trade-driven slowdown in economic
growth. "The uncertainty around unresolved structural issues such as IP (intellectual property) theft and subsidies to state owned
enterprises are likely to remain deterrents for a pick-up in much needed capital expenditure
On this score details on a potential currency pact will be important," they said in a morning note. On Friday, the dollar was little changed
against the yen at 107.98, while the euro gained 0.1 per cent to buy $1.1017
The pound, which had earlier given up some of the previous day's gains, turned higher, adding 0.1 per cent to $1.2455. The dollar index,
which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major rivals, was down at 98.636 after posting its biggest daily drop in five weeks on
waning safe-haven demand for the currency. The British pound had jumped nearly 2 per cent on Thursday, its biggest daily gain since March,
after Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said a Brexit deal could be clinched by the end of October after what he called a very positive
meeting with his British counterpart, Boris Johnson. The move away from safe havens also lifted the yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury
notes to 1.6699 per cent compared with a US close of 1.656 per cent on Thursday
Yields rose across the curve, with two-year notes yielding 1.5486 per cent compared with a US close of 1.53 per cent. In commodity markets,
oil prices extended gains on news of an explosion on an Iranian tanker in the Red Sea
Prices had climbed earlier after the head of OPEC said the organisation could take action to balance oil markets, including a deeper cut in
oil supplies, and amid hopes that progress toward ending the US-China trade war could help to revive economic growth and lift fuel
consumption. Global benchmark Brent crude was up around 2 per cent at $60.29 per barrel. Gold, which had found its appeal tarnished by
rising risk appetite, recovered some ground, with spot gold trading up 0.1 per cent at $1,495.63 per ounce