HONG KONG: Most Asian markets built on the week’s rally Wednesday, boosted by US stimulus hopes and signs of easing virus infections as well as improvements in vaccination programmes.
Support was also being provided by hopes that the social media-fuelled retail trading battle that rattled Wall Street last week appeared to be fizzling.
The gains follow a two-day surge as equities recovered from last week’s rout, though they were tempered by worries that valuations might still be a little frothy, while Hong Kong and Shanghai were hit as China’s central bank sucked more cash out of financial markets to avert a bubble.
Oil held up after hitting a pre-pandemic high on Tuesday but there are worries the improvement will give producers an excuse to begin lifting output again.
The Democrat-controlled US Senate voted 50-49 to begin the budget reconciliation process that will allow them to push through Joe Biden’s vast economic rescue package and avoid the filibuster that requires 60 votes for most legislation.
While the move will likely mean the new president will not be able to get the bipartisan agreement he called for, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said a “big bold package” is needed to avoid the long, drawn-out recovery seen in the aftermath of the financial crisis a decade ago.
“We are not going to dilute, dither or delay, because the needs of the American people are just too great,” he told reporters.
The move came after Biden held talks with 10 Republican lawmakers to discuss their $600 billion package that omitted several measures in his own $1.9 trillion proposal.
“We are still in the early rounds of stimulus discussions, but it seems certain Democrats will end up doing this deal all by themselves,” said OANDA’s Edward Moya.
And while he warned that a hike in the minimum wage — a key part of Biden’s plan — could hit small businesses, he added: “In the end, the economy will see at least a trillion dollars in stimulus via the budget reconciliation.”
The developments came as data showed infections and deaths in the United States — the worst-hit country — appeared to be easing, which experts said was down to better adherence to mask-wearing and social distancing, and the end of the holiday season.