Asian markets rose in thin trade, extending their rally as fears over the Omicron coronavirus variant faded and further positive economic data from the United States cheered investors.
Studies indicating Omicron infections are less likely to result in hospitalisation and US approval of drugs from Merck and Pfizer to add to growing safety measures against Covid have increased confidence that the pandemic will have less impact on the economy.
“Omicron is looking more like a short-term disruption to the economic outlook and not a destructive headwind that knocks the economy off its course,” said OANDA’s Edward Moya.
On Wall Street, the S&P 500 ended the last session before the holiday weekend at a fresh record following a raft of mostly decent US economic data.
Commerce Department data showed consumer spending climbed in November, though at a slower rate, and new home sales rose.
Jobless benefit claims held steady from the prior week and orders for big-ticket manufactured goods climbed, though mostly due to aircraft.
Inflation, however, posted the biggest increase in nearly four decades, illustrating the delicate balancing act the Federal Reserve faces between reining in inflationary pressures and keeping the economic recovery on track.
Omicron “will create some slowdowns in the economy, perhaps some slowdowns of production which could add to inflation pressures in the short term,” Paul Christopher, head of global market strategy at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, told Bloomberg Television, adding however that the economy would work its way through the situation.
The optimistic mood carried over to Asia, with most markets rising, although in quiet trade with several stock exchanges shut or on shortened hours ahead of the Christmas holiday.
Hong Kong rose 0.1% while Singapore and Sydney added 0.4% after half-day sessions. Seoul, Taipei and Jakarta also enjoyed gains while Shanghai was among the few losers, ending down 0.7% and Tokyo closed marginally lower.
European markets were mixed, with London edging higher in opening trade while Paris slipped 0.1%. Frankfurt was closed for the holiday weekend.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 closed down 0.1% to 28,782.59 points; Hong Kong Hang Seng Index ended up 0.1% to 23,223.76 points and Shanghai Composite closed down 0.7% to 3,618.05 points yesterday.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Finance World staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)