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Asian stocks rise after Wall St slides on rate hike fears

Shanghai, Hong Kong and Seoul advanced. Japanese markets were closed for a holiday. Oil prices gained.

Asian stocks rise after Wall St slides on rate hike fears
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BEIJING: Asian stock markets rose on Thursday following Wall Street's biggest one-day decline in two months after notes from a Federal Reserve meeting showed officials expect to keep US interest rates high to fight stubborn inflation.

Shanghai, Hong Kong and Seoul advanced. Japanese markets were closed for a holiday. Oil prices gained.

Wall Street sank on Wednesday after notes from the Federal Reserve's latest board meeting showed members expect ''ongoing increases'' in its key lending rate to slow the economy. That dampened hopes that cuts might start as early as late this year.

''The need for higher for longer' rates was made plain,'' said Vishnu Varathan of Mizuho Bank in a report.

The Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.1per cent to 3,294.68 and the Hang Seng in Hong Kong advanced 0.5 per cent to 20,524.60.

The Kospi in Seoul rose 1.2 per cent to 2,447.70 while Sydney's S and P-ASX 200 shed 0.3 per cent to 7,289.70.

New Zealand and Jakarta advanced while Singapore declined.

Global stock prices have been declining on worries inflation might not be cooling as quickly or smoothly as traders hoped.

Traders worry the Fed and other central banks might be willing to push the global economy into recession to extinguish inflation that has stuck near multi-decade highs despite sharp rate hikes over the past year.

Traders have begun calling off bets the Fed might cut rates late this year. They expect at least two more increases by the Fed of 0.25 percentage points. Some think the US central bank might go back to using unusually large increases of double that margin.

The Fed's key lending rate stands at 4.50 per cent to 4.75 per cent, up from close to zero a year ago. It has said it expects no cuts this year.

The Fed minutes showed ''a few'' officials preferred to raise the benchmark rate by 0.5 points at the last meeting, double the margin the bank decided on.

That followed resilient readings on hiring, retail sales and inflation that showed economic activity still is strong.

On Wall Street, the benchmark S and P 500 index lost 0.2 per cent to 3,991.05. The S and P's gain so far this year has narrowed to 3.9 per cent from a peak of 8.9per cent.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 0.3 per cent to 33,045.09. The Nasdaq edged up 0.1 per cent to 11,507.07.

Trades see a 3-in-4 chance the Fed will raise rates by 0.25 points at its next meeting in March, according to CME Group. They see a 27 per cent chance of a hike of 0.50 points.

A month ago, traders saw a roughly one-in-five chance that the Fed wouldn't raise rates at all in March.

In energy markets, benchmark U.S. crude gained 37 cents to USD74.32 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract tumbled USD 2.41 on Wednesday to USD 73.95.

Brent crude, the price basis for international oil trading, advanced 37 cents to USD80.82 per barrel in London. It fell USD 2.45 the previous session to USD 80.60.

The dollar fell to 134.95 Japanese yen from 134.99 yen. The euro fell to USD 1.0601 from USD1.0650.

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PTI
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