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Canadian dollar, many share markets up on deal on NAFTA or 'USMCA'

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Reuters TOKYO

By Hideyuki Sano

TOKYO (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar, the Mexican peso, U.S. stock futures and many share markets gained on Monday after the United States and Canada forged a last-gasp deal to salvage a trilateral trade agreement in North America.

While analysts delved into the details of the pact, which is to be called United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), most investors reacted favourably, believing that getting a deal is better than no deal.

"Investors will likely view the latest agreement positively, a sign that trade disputes are easing outside China-U.S. talks," said Norihiro Fujito, chief investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

 

Most European shares are expected open higher, with financial spread-betters looking for 0.4 percent gains for France's CAC and Germany's DAX. In Britain, the FTSE was seen slipping 0.1 percent.

U.S. stock futures gained 0.5 percent while Japan's Nikkei rose 0.5 percent.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was soft, falling 0.25 percent. China's financial markets were closed for a holiday, as was Hong Kong's stock exchange.

Casting a shadow in Asia, two surveys showed on Sunday that growth in China's manufacturing sector sputtered in September as domestic and export demand softened..

The private Caixin/Markit factory Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) fell to 50.0, the lowest reading since May 2017, in a stark reminder that the trade disputes are starting to have real consequences on the economy.

"The escalation of trade tensions between the U.S. and China recently has likely weighed on purchasing managers' sentiment as reflected by softer readings in trade-related sub-indices," wrote economists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

"Deterioration of PMI in September is in line with our expectation that coincident growth indicators will get worse before getting better. As U.S.-China trade conflict intensifies, we expect China's policymakers to step up monetary and fiscal easing to soften the blow from higher tariffs," they added.

In Japan, the Bank of Japan's tankan survey showed business confidence among Japan's big manufacturers has worsened in the September for three quarters in a row - for the first time since 2008-2009.

The world's share markets had rallied in September on hopes that China and the United States will eventually work out a deal on trade, but plans for talks around the end of the month collapsed after the two sides launched more tit-for-tat tariffs.

In the currency market, the Canadian dollar rose more than 0.5 percent to a four-month high of C$1.2814 to the U.S. dollar.

The Mexican peso also gained more than 0.6 percent to 18.54 per dollar, its highest since early August.

As risk appetites improved, the yen softened 0.2 percent to 113.96 per dollar, its lowest since mid-November last year.

The euro was dogged by worries about a rise in Italy's fiscal deficit after the Italian government agreed to set a higher than expected budget deficit target that could put Rome on a collision course with Brussels.

The common currency traded at $1.1608, having lost 1.2 percent last week and off three-month high of $1.18155 touched a week ago.

Oil prices gained, with international benchmark Brent hitting a four-year high, as U.S. sanctions on Tehran squeezed Iranian crude exports, tightening supply even as other key exporters increased production.

Brent crude futures rose 0.6 percent to as high as $83.25 per barrel, the strongest level since November 2014.

(Editing by Richard Borsuk)

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First Published: Oct 01 2018 | 1:18 PM IST

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