Asian shares rebounded on Friday on signs euro zone officials will soon approve a long-awaited bailout for Greece, reducing the risk of a debt default, and after jobs and manufacturing data pointed to a healthier US economy.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan rose as much as 1.4%, recovering most of the losses during Asia's trading day on Thursday when worries about a delay in signing a Greek deal sparked fears of a Greek default.
The index was up 1% at midday, pointing to a weekly gain of 1.5%.
Japan's Nikkei rallied nearly 2% to six-month highs, with exporters and financials leading the gains.
The euro traded around $1.3135, above a three-week low on Thursday of $1.2974. Against the yen, it reached a two-month high above 104 yen.
The dollar rose to a 3-1/2-month high above 79 yen on Friday after the US data, adding fuel to its rally triggered earlier this week by the Bank of Japan's policy easing.
"Sentiment has brightened to encourage risk taking," said Masayuki Doshida, senior market analyst at Rakuten Securities.
"An easy monetary environment continues, with another liquidity injection scheduled later this month from the European Central Bank and expectations a March default by Greece can be avoided spurring 'risk-on' momentum," he said.
Euro zone officials said on Thursday they were putting the finishing touches to a second bailout deal for Greece for approval on Monday, with a focus on how Greece can prioritise debt repayment and ways to ensure Athens commits to reforms.
Sources also said euro zone central banks had agreed on a Greek bond swap.
The risk of Athens missing a March 20 deadline to pay a 14.5 billion euro bond redemption payment appeared to have eased after a spokesman for the Greek government said on Thursday that Greece expects to begin a debt swap scheme with private bondholders.
Fundamentals Hold Key
London copper recovered from Thursday's three-week low to rise 1.2% to $8,400 a tonne. Spot gold was up 0.2% to $1,731 a tonne, rising along with equities.
US crude changed hands around $102.33 a barrel, after ending at a six-week closing high of $102.31 the day before.
Brent stood barely changed around $120.13, after settling on Thursday at $120.11, the highest settlement since mid-June, on worries about supply from Iran and the North Sea, where output was expected to dip next month.
Asian credit markets firmed with rising risk appetite, narrowing the spreads on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment grade index by 8 basis points.
"Greece is less likely to deliver a scare to markets, which already seem to be pricing quite a negative scenario," said Barclays Capital in a note, but added that it was difficult to envisage a quick resolution given rising implementation risks amid domestic political pressures building ahead of elections.
"(Markets) have become more optimistic about the US, so a 'growth scare' there could upset market sentiment," it said.
US jobless claims unexpectedly fell last week to a near four-year low, January housing starts came in better than forecast, and the pace of factory activity in the US Mid-Atlantic region gained momentum in February.
The Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose to 1,358.05 on Thursday, a nine-month high, boosted by the US data.
The CBOE Volatility index VIX, which measures expected volatility in the S&P 500 index over the next 30 days, plunged about 9% on Thursday for its biggest drop since December 9.
But signs of strains were not completely wiped out yet.
The Markit iTraxx index of credit default spreads for European senior financials, measuring the cost of insuring against a bank defaulting on its debts, has risen by almost 50 basis points in the past 10 days to above 240 bps.