index to a fresh 2-1/2 year high on a weaker dollar and strong trade data from China, while expectations of a European Central Bank rate hike in July propped up the euro.
Copper prices inched higher, tin hit a record for a second straight session and lead scaled a three-year high on the London Metal Exchange, while Brent crude prices fell as prospects of a peace deal in Libya eased supply worries.
Shares of resources companies firmed along with metals, thought profit taking left Asia’s major stock markets weaker. European shares were also expected to open slightly lower, with investors cautious ahead of the start of earnings eason.
Gold jumped to a life-time high for a fifth session, topping US$1 476 as prospects of more declines in the US dollar drove investors into the precious metal, with record exchange traded fund holdings helping silver to its highest in more than three decades.
“I think there is a good chance that gold could hit US$1 500 an ounce within this quarter.
“And perhaps even higher if we see the weakness in the dollar persist and the Federal Reserve continues their relatively easy monetary policy,” said Ong Yi Ling, investment analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore.
“This week, perhaps, the focus could be on whether the Federal Reserve actually indicates to the market whether they will be exiting their loose monetary policy, and whether they display any hawkish signals.”
Japanese stocks eased 0,5 percent after hitting a one-month high on Friday and after Citigroup slashed ratings on the country’s major vehicle makers to “sell”, saying the impact of last month’s massive earthquake had yet to be fully priced in.
Hong Kong fell 0,4 percent and South Korea ended 0,3 percent lower. Australia was the lone big bourse in the region to show gains, advancing 0,6 percent on strengh in mining and oil shares.
During the first week of April, flows into Asia-ex Japan equity funds hit a 20-week high as expectations grew that most Asian economies were able to keep inflationary pressures in check, data from fund-tracker EPFR Global showed.
Chinese shares traded at 2011 highs due to heavy inflows from foreign investors.
After a patchy start to the year, emerging markets have roared back in recent weeks as policy tightening in China showed that authorities in the world’s biggest economies are getting more sanguine about growth prospects.
Three central banks in Asia are set to review monetary policy this week with Singapore likely to tighten policy further by recentering its currency band higher, which investors said would be another thumbs up for emerging market prospects.
“This means more capital inflows into emerging market assets and likely continued gains in their currencies,” Credit Agricole strategists said in a daily note. – Reuters.
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