GLOBAL MARKETS-Asia shares rise on progress in euro zone rescue
* Eyes on China dataBy Chikako MogiTOKYO, Oct 13 (Reuters) - Asian shares rose on Thursday on
growing hopes that Europe is taking concrete steps to contain
the region’s debt woes and head off a systemic banking crisis.Strengthening investor confidence in the euro zone
underpinned the single currency, while receding concerns about
the banks’ problems threatening the wider financial system
sharply tightened Asian credit markets.MSCI’s broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan
rose 0.6 percent, following a 1.4 percent gain
in the MSCI world equity index , which posted an
increase for the sixth session in a row on Wednesday.The Nikkei average opened up 1.07 percent on
Thursday. On Wall Street, the benchmark S&P 500 stock index
compiled a gain of 9.8 percent over the past seven
sessions, its steepest advance since mid-March 2009.The euro stayed bid early in Asia on Thursday, having jumped
to a near one-month high on the dollar as Europe took a step
closer to shoring up its financial rescue fund.Lawmakers in Slovakia struck a deal on Wednesday to ratify a
plan to bolster the euro zone’s rescue fund by Friday,
effectively ending a crisis that had threatened the currency’s
main safety net. Slovakia is the only country in the 17-nation
bloc left to approve the revamp of the fund.Adding to the sense of urgency, the President of the
European Commission, Jose Manuel Barroso, said Europe needed to
take decisive action on Greece and outlined a broad plan to
contain the debt crisis.As European officials step up efforts to provide a more
specific roadmap to resolve its debt woes and recover investor
confidence, the European Union is expected to announce a bank
recapitalization plan designed to cushion the impact any default
by Greece could have on the region’s banks.Germany and France, the leading powers in the bloc, have
promised to propose a comprehensive strategy to fight the debt
crisis at an EU summit on Oct. 23.In credit markets, which had been feeling the strain of
waning confidence in the financial system in recent months, the
iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment grade index
narrowed by about 15 points.Oil prices fell on Thursday, with Brent crude futures down 0.1 percent at $111.21 a barrel after rising the
day before for an 11.6 percent gain over six sessions. U.S.
crude futures fell 0.85 percent to $84.84 a barrel, after
snapping a five-session streak of higher closes on Wednesday.Asian markets are focused on China’s trade data due at
around 0100 GMT to gauge the strength of the world’s
second-largest economy.A stronger-than-expected reading would boost investor
confidence about a soft landing for the Chinese economy, while a
weaker outcome would add to worries about global growth.