Oil Stocks Pull Asian Stocks Higher

HONG KONG (Reuters) —
People walk past an electronic board showing Hong Kong stock index outside a local bank in Hong Kong, Friday, July 8, 2016. Asian shares mostly fell Friday, with investors cautious following the plunge in oil prices overnight and concerns that a correction in commodity prices is underway, and as they await the release of U.S. inflation and June non-farm payrolls data later in the day. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
People walk past an electronic board showing the Hong Kong stock index outside a local bank in Hong Kong. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

Oil stocks pulled regional stock markets higher on Thursday after OPEC members agreed to curb output in a surprise deal, though investors were wary of chasing markets higher as the presidential election neared.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was up 0.9 percent by mid-morning, thanks to a bounce in energy shares, but other markets such as Hong Kong were trading near the day’s lows after an early jump.

Stocks in Europe were expected to open higher following Asia.

“Despite the favorable oil deal, foreign institutional investors are sticking to their favorite counters before the U.S. elections results as there is simply too much market uncertainty,” said Andrew Sullivan, managing director, sales trading at Halting International Securities Group in Hong Kong.

Japan’s Nikkei climbed 1.5 percent, after losing 1.3 percent the previous day. In Hong Kong, the benchmark index was up 0.5 percent with energy-related shares the biggest gainers.

Oil futures retreated in Asian trade as the market grew more skeptical of the deal, pondering how the group agreed to limit production and how OPEC would implement such a plan.

“Investors and traders are skeptical – with good reason. More cynical traders are questioning the complete lack of detail, including the potentially problematic question of which nations will curtail production,” Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at Sydney’s CM Markets, told Reuters.

Though OPEC’s first agreement to cut production since 2008 drove risky assets initially higher, the lack of detail made some investors wary.

Brent crude eased slightly after earlier climbing to a high of $49.09 when the market opened, its highest since Sept. 9. WTI crude edged lower to $46.99 a barrel, after first hitting $47.47, its highest since Sept. 8.

“I think the markets are still not fully convinced,” said Daisuke Uno, chief strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Bank.

Still, the jump in oil prices boosted risk assets and undermined the yen, which is often seen as a safe haven at times of economic stress.

The dollar rose 0.7 percent to 101.38 yen, extending its rebound from a one-month low of 100.085 touched on Tuesday.

The euro was higher at $1.12305, recovering from Wednesday’s low of $1.1182, helped in part by rebound in shares of Deutsche Bank.

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