EMERGING MARKETS-Taipei, Singapore lead Asia markets to weekly gains

BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 10/03/25 03:31 AM EDT

        *
      Taiwan stocks at record high for two straight days


        *
      Manila stocks set to rise 1.4% for week


        *
      Taiwan dollar rises 0.4%



 (Updates for afternoon trade)
    By Rishav Chatterjee
       Oct 3 (Reuters) - Taiwan and Singapore stocks hit fresh
records on Friday, leading a week of gains across emerging Asia
as investors piled into risk assets on mounting bets of a
Federal Reserve rate cut this month, and a wave of optimism
around artificial intelligence.
    The MSCI EM Asia Index eased slightly on the
day. It remained on track for a weekly rise of 3.8%, its biggest
weekly increase since September 12.
    A similar gauge, the MSCI Asia-Pacific equities excluding
Japan, touched a record high and was set to
advance 3.5% for the week.
    Friday's trade was subdued, but markets still closed out a
robust week, buoyed by upbeat headlines, optimism over AI and
expectations of a Fed rate cut towards the end of the month.

        Traders are now pricing in two quarter-point Fed rate
cuts by the end of the year as almost a done deal..
    Taiwan's benchmark climbed 1.5%, rising to a record
for a second day. The index is on track for its sixth straight
weekly gain, a run last seen in early 2024.
    Singapore's index scaled a fresh record for a second
straight day, with gains led by major lender DBS Group
.
    South Korea's Kospi was closed on Friday on account
of a public holiday, but was up 4.8% for the week as of
Thursday.
    Philippine and Indonesian shares rose 1.1%
and 0.3%, respectively, while Malaysia slipped modestly,
but was still set to end the week in positive territory. Manila
equities were on course to rise 1.4% for the week.
    In the week ahead, investors will be keenly awaiting policy
moves by the Philippine and Thai central banks, while looking
out for trade numbers from Taiwan.
    Thai bond markets are pricing in up to 50 bps of easing in
the coming months, with expectations the central bank could cut
rates by 25 bps to 1.25% in October under its new dovish
governor, as growth momentum softens, said DBS analysts.
    With growth steady and inflation within targets, the
Philippine central bank is expected to keep rates at 5% on
October 9, though a final cut could come in December following
U.S. Fed easing, added DBS.
    Trading in Asian currencies remained tepid on the day as the
dollar gained some momentum and traders expressed caution while
assessing the impact of the U.S. government shutdown.
    "Despite the US government shutdown, a likely delay of US
payrolls release today, and Trump's threats to fire more Federal
workers, markets have stayed remarkably resilient," said Chang
Wei Liang, FX and credits strategist at DBS.
    "The corollary of benign financial market conditions is
unusually low FX volatility across the board."
    In emerging Asia, the Indonesian rupiah and
Philippine peso added 0.1% each. The Taiwan dollar
 gained 0.4% while the Thai baht was flat.

    HIGHLIGHTS
    ** Indonesian 10-year benchmark flat at 6.334%
    ** Philippines ends quake rescue efforts, priority now on
helping 20,000 displaced

 Asia stock indexes
  and currencies at
      0650 GMT
 COUNTRY    FX RIC    FX DAILY   FX YTD %   INDEX   STOCKS  STOCKS
                          %                         DAILY   YTD %
                                                      %
  Japan                 -0.24     +6.50              1.85   16.44
  China    India                 -0.09     -3.56             -0.02    5.01
 Indonesi               +0.06     -2.90              0.26   14.30
    a
 Malaysia               -0.24     +6.05             -0.19   -0.47
 Philippi               +0.12     +0.18              1.14   -6.43
   nes
 S.Korea   Singapor               -0.12     +5.83              0.35   16.44
    e
  Taiwan                +0.36     +8.17              1.45   16.18
 Thailand               +0.02     +5.77              0.32   -7.70

 (Reporting by Rishav Chatterjee in Bengaluru; Editing by
Christian Schmollinger and Harikrishnan Nair)

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Lower-quality debt securities generally offer higher yields, but also involve greater risk of default or price changes due to potential changes in the credit quality of the issuer. Any fixed income security sold or redeemed prior to maturity may be subject to loss.

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