Asian shares rise but
gains capped by US worries
Asian markets rose Tuesday but early gains
were pared in a muted reaction from investors after the
The dollar bounced back from Monday's lows in Japanese
forex trading despite the impasse in
Investors also took heart from data showing Chinese
manufacturing activity at its strongest in 17 months, adding to hopes a
slowdown has come to an end.
The
World markets had expected the deadline to pass with no
breakthrough and shares had fallen in previous sessions.
The
Obama accused Republicans of holding
In a speech to US troops to tell them they would
continue to be paid, Obama said: "Unfortunately, Congress has not
fulfilled its responsibility, it has failed to pass a budget."
Tracey Warren of CMC Markets Stockbroking told Dow
Jones Newswires: "A prolonged shutdown could have a major impact on
confidence and on the
Adding to the sense of crisis, the two sides appear
unlikely to reach a deal to lift the US borrowing limit by mid-October, when
the government runs out of cash, leaving it unable to service its debts and
in turn possibly default.
In Japan, the central bank's quarterly Tankan survey
surged to its strongest level since December 2007 with a reading of
"plus 12" from "plus 4" in its last survey, showing that
major manufacturers are confident about future prospects.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is Tuesday expected to
announce a sales tax hike seen as crucial to cutting
Jiji Press reported that Abe has decided to increase
the tax from 5.0 percent to 8.0 percent.
He told a meeting of government and ruling party
policymakers that the increase was aimed at "maintaining the nation's
trust and handing over a sustainable social security system to the next
generation", Jiji reported.
The premier is also expected to unveil a stimulus
package to help soften the blow, which has put downward pressure on the yen.
In afternoon Tokyo trade the greenback was at 98.24
yen, up from 98.21 yen in New York and much stronger than the levels around
97.80 yen seen in Tokyo on Monday.
The euro bought $1.3544 compared with $1.3524, while it
also fetched 132.95 yen against 132.81 yen.
In
A reading above 50 indicates expansion while anything
below signals contraction.
It is the latest in a series of of recent data
indicating the Chinese economy is picking up steam after suffering a slowdown
in the first half of the year.
A separate survey by HSBC came in a 50.2 on Monday, up
from 50.1 in August and much higher than an 11-month low of 47.7 in July.
On oil markets,
Gold cost $1,328.32 at 0500 GMT compared with $1,340.86
on Monday.
Source: AFP
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Thứ Ba, 1 tháng 10, 2013
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