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Asian markets push on with rally after US-Mexico trade deal

Agence France-Presse
Asian markets push on with rally after US-Mexico trade deal
Picture taken at the Port of Veracruz, in Veracruz State, Mexico, on 27 August, 2018. Mexican President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador called Monday for a three-way trade deal with the United States and Canada, saying a two-way agreement reached with the US was just a first step. "It's important that Canada also be included," said the leftist president-elect, who takes office on December 1. "The free-trade agreement should remain as it was originally conceived" he told journalists.
VICTORIA RAZO / AFP

HONG KONG — Asian investors extended a rally on Tuesday, tracking another Wall Street record as investors cheered a fresh trade deal between the United States and Mexico that brings an end to one row picked by Donald Trump that had rattled global markets.

The agreement raises hopes the two-decade-old North American Free Trade Agreement, torn up by the White House soon after Trump's election, can be salvaged after Canada rejoins talks on Tuesday.

The pact was described by the US president as "a big day for trade" and it sent the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to fresh all-time highs, while the Dow broke 26,000 for the first time since January.

Monday's agreement comes after officials from Washington and Beijing held talks last week aimed at easing trade tensions that have seen them hit each other with tariffs on tens of billions of dollars worth of goods.

While the meeting did not achieve any breakthrough, the fact they took place was seen as a good sign.

Stephen Innes, head of Asia-Pacific trading at OANDA, said dealers were "in a festive mood" as the deal removed "one major hurdle that has been haunting North American investors for months".

He added: "Markets are revelling in any trade positives... After all, a deal is a deal."

Equities, which enjoyed a healthy run after Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell indicated Friday the bank would not aggressively lift interest rates, continued to rise.

Tokyo went into the break 0.6 percent higher with Toyota surging almost two percent after saying it will invest about $500 million into Uber as part of a deal to work on mass-producing self-driving vehicles.

Hong Kong added 0.5 percent and Shanghai rose 0.2 percent.

Sydney climbed 0.7 percent and Singapore was 0.8 percent higher, with Seoul adding 0.4 percent and Taipei 0.6 percent stronger.

Manila, Wellington and Jakarta were also sharply higher.

The more upbeat outlook helped high-yielding currencies. Mexico's peso jumped more than one percent on the news but struggled to maintain the gains on Tuesday, though the Canadian dollar was up 0.8 percent.

South Korea's won, the Australian dollar and the South African rand also enjoyed solid buying.

The Turkish lira fell 1.7 percent to around 6.2 against the dollar as the country's markets reopened after a week-long holiday, with dealers continuing to fret over the financial crisis in the country.

The euro dipped by managed to hold gains that came on the back of data showing business confidence in the German economy, Europe's biggest, bounced back as fears over a US trade war eased.

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