Thursday April 30, 03:00 PM   <http://in.reuters.com/> World stocks hit
4-mth peak, Asia powers gains
<http://in.biz.yahoo.com/090430/137/batiag.html>    By Eric Burroughs

HONG KONG  -

World stocks scaled a four-month peak on Thursday, powered by solid gains in
Asia, as investors took heart from signs of improvement in the U.S. economy
suggesting regional exporters may need to start cranking up production.

European shares also rose in early trade, gaining more than a percent.

A record drop in U.S. business inventories in the first-quarter and
surprisingly robust consumer spending were widely seen by economists as
positive pointing to a growth pick-up in the world's largest economy in
coming months.

The U.S. Federal Reserve tweaked its policy statement to say that the
economic outlook was improving while vowing to keep rates at a historic low
for a long stretch.

Safe-haven government bonds slid and higher-yielding currencies tied to risk
appetite such as the Australian dollar jumped against the low-yielding yen.

Reports that talks between struggling U.S. automaker Chrysler and the
government had broken down and a bankruptcy filing was imminent only briefly
dented the jump in riskier assets.

"People were so bearish that the burden of proof to surprise people is
relatively low. What you're getting is a joyless rally," said Adrian Mowat,
emerging market and Asia equity strategist at JPMorgan Chase in Hong Kong.

"As earnings expectations are revised up with economic activity, the market
goes up with that," he said.

Data in Japan showing industrial production grew twice as much as expected
in March thanks to strong Chinese demand for electronics is one of the main
factors fuelling the rally in Asian technology shares in the past two
months.

The multiple signs of economic activity recovering around the world has
stoked expectations that Asian companies and exporters may have cut
inventories too quickly and may need to switch gears and start restocking to
meet demand.

Investors have also taken in stride the outbreak of swine flu around the
world that prompted the World Health Organization on Wednesday to raise its
threat level, saying the world is on the brink of a pandemic.

Taiwan's TAIEX index posted its biggest daily gain in 19 years with a 6.7
percent rise on expectations for an influx of Chinese investment after a
series of cross-straits talks have led to warmer ties between the two
countries.

The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan soared more than 4
percent to a six-month high and was up more than 13 percent on the year. The
MSCI all-countries world index was up about a percent, mainly driven by the
3.9 percent jump in Japan

RESTOCKING TO HELP

The rise came as the forward 12-month price-to-earnings ratio for the
benchmark Asian index touched 13.99, the highest since January 2008 and up
sharply from a low of 7.87 touched in November when the regional index hit a
five-year low, according to data from Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

But JPMorgan's Mowat said the forward P/Es tend to look high at low points,
and that by their study the Asia market has only been cheaper 5 percent of
the time going back to the early 1990s.

Tim Rocks, Asia equity strategist at Macquarie Securities in Hong Kong, said
in a report this week that the largest inventory restocking cycle in living
memory is under way,

Rocks said that historically Asia benefits from production bounces tied to
inventory restocking, with sectors like technology benefitting the most.

Since the beginning of March when the MSCI Asia benchmark bottomed out, the
tech sector has been one of the biggest winners with a surge of 41 percent.

South Korean industrial production also beat expectations in March with a
4.8 percent increase, showing that factories across the region are boosting
activity.

(for a graphic on Korean industrial production, click
https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/GLB_MKT0409.jpg )

The solid gains in Asian equity markets outpaced the 2.2 percent rise in the
U.S. S&P 500 index on Wednesday, while S&P futures were up about a percent
and pointing to a positive start when U.S. markets open later in the day.

Thursday marks the last day of the week for many markets around the world
observing May 1 holidays. In Asia, markets in South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong
and Singapore among others will be closed on Friday.

Japanese markets will be open on Friday but then close Monday through
Wednesday for the rest of the country's Golden Week break.

DOLLAR DOWN, AUSSIE JUMPS, KIWI RECOVERS

The dollar slid as investors shifted funds into higher-yielding currencies
and riskier assets. The dollar shed 0.75 percent to 84.010, while the euro
climbed 0.9 percent to $1.3370.

Gold and oil prices both edged up.

The Australian dollar was up 1.6 percent at $0.7353, adding to hefty gains
scored the previous day as market players chased the relatively
higher-yielding currency on the rally in equities.

Even the New Zealand dollar bounced back from an initial slide after the
country's central bank cut interest rates by half a point to a record low of
2.5 percent, as expected, and pledge to keep rates low for a while.

The kiwi was little changed at $0.5730 after tumbling more than 1 percent
earlier The rate cut and remarks drove the two-year New Zealand swap rate
down about 20 basis points.

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