The much anticipated U.S. consumer price index (CPI) data for April fueled optimism that inflation was easing, prompting traders to raise bets that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in September and December.
logged their biggest one-day gain since Dec. 14 on Thursday, boosted by renewed hopes for U.S. rate cuts following a smaller-than-expected rise in consumer , while traders also assessed domestic jobless data.The S&P/ASX 200 index closed 1.7% higher at 7,881.300, with mining, , and leading gains. The benchmark ended 0.4% higher on Wednesday.
The much anticipated U.S. consumer price index (CPI) data for April fueled that inflation was easing, prompting traders to raise bets that the will cut in September and December.
Adding to the upbeat sentiment, the Australian unemployment rate rose more than expected in April, a move that was likely to douse any chance of rate hikes.
"Australia's unemployment rate rose to 4.1%, easing recent pressure on the to hike rates again, for now. The data release has also lifted expectations for rate cuts early next year," said Josh Gilbert, market analyst at .
In the resource-heavy bourse, bellwether miners soared 1.3%.
Mining behemoth gained 1.4% while advanced 1%.
Rate-sensitive financials rose 1.9%, snapping a three-day losing streak.
All "Big Four" banks gained between 1.5% and 2.3%, with ANZ Group rising 2.3%.
added 1.5%, with biotech giant CSL gaining 1.2%.
Gold stocks jumped 2.4%, tracking higher bullion prices.
Evolution Mining gained 2.5% while Northern Star added 2.4%.
Information technology stocks rose 3.3%, tracking U.S. peers, while real-estate stocks jumped 3.4%, with Goodman Group gaining 4.6%.
New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index snapped a three-day losing streak and closed 1.8% higher at 11,728.0600.
Focus is now on the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's cash rate policy decision, due next week, to get clarity on the central bank's rate-cut trajectory.
Source: Stocks-Markets-Economic Times