The dollar suffered fresh pressure on Friday

Asia’s biggest markets have enjoyed huge gains over the past year — with Hong Kong up more than a third and Tokyo 20 percent higher.

The dollar suffered fresh pressure on Friday as traders cash in the recent gains fuelled by Donald Trump’s tax cuts, while Asian equities were on course to end a strong year in tepid fashion.

Asia’s biggest markets have enjoyed huge gains over the past year — with Hong Kong up more than a third and Tokyo 20 percent higher — fuelled by expectations that Donald Trump would push through business-friendly measures, reports BSS.

And while he suffered a series of stumbles he managed to finish 2017 with one major legislative achievement — across-the-board tax cuts that include the slashing of corporate rates.

The focus is now on his programme for the next 12 months, with an infrastructure spending bill promised, though there are warnings of headwinds with his low poll ratings and mid-term elections in November that could see his Republicans lose the Senate.

An employee of a bank counts US dollar notes at a branch in Hanoi

However, despite the positive news from Federal Reserve interest rate hikes, a stronger economy and improving employment, the dollar has been unable to break away from its peers.

On Friday the euro was at one-month highs, while the pound was also in the ascendancy. Most high-yielding currencies including the Australian dollar, South Korean won and Indonesian rupiah were up.

NO CATALYSTS FOR DOLLAR

“Whether it’s month-end flows or simply that there are no catalysts to buy dollars at the moment that traders can grasp doesn’t matter,” Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrader.

“What matters is that for months now, the dollar has been unable to capitalize on its improved economic outlook, on the tightening plans of the Fed and on the reality that … there are clear policy and timing divergence between the Fed and other central banks.”

In holiday-thinned share trading, Hong Kong was up 0.1 percent and Shanghai added 0.2 percent. Tokyo ended the morning 0.3 percent higher, with tech titan SoftBank rising 0.5 percent after announcing a deal to take a huge stake in US ride-sharing giant Uber.

Taipei, Manila, and Jakarta were all higher. However, Sydney eased 0.3 percent and Singapore dipped 0.2 percent while Wellington was 0.1 percent down.

Bitcoin edged up about seven percent at $14,800 having fallen more than 11 percent on Thursday on the back of news that South Korea would ban anonymous trading in virtual currencies and crack down on links to money laundering activities.

The digital unit has surged this year, rising more than 25-fold from January to hit a record around $19,500 earlier this month, according to Bloomberg.

This article has been posted by a News Hour Correspondent. For queries, please contact through [email protected]
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