Singapore - Asian shares rose on Monday and the euro held near a one-month high amid hopes that a crucial week for the eurozone crisis will see policymakers finally come up with a plan to resolve the region's debt woes and recapitalise its banks.
Commodities were also higher on hopes that Europe will avoid a meltdown in its financial system and on signs that China, a key source of resources demand, is containing inflation and so more likely to avoid an economic "hard landing".
G20 finance chiefs at the weekend heaped pressure on eurozone leaders to get on top of the 2-year-old debt crisis, throwing attention on to what is now being seen as make-or-break European Union summit on October 23.
"The market is growing more expectant of more aggressive measures from Europe aimed at solving its debt crisis," said Kim Young-june, a market analyst at SK Securities.
Some market players are talking of a "binary" moment for the eurozone in which the leaders' summit either comes up with the goods to assuage concerns about the debt crisis or disappoints markets again.
The former might well be taken as a reason for a sustained rally in riskier assets such as equities and commodities. The latter would almost certainly spark a sell-off.
For now, investors in riskier assets are looking at reasons to be hopeful. Japan's Nikkei share average rose 1.5%, while MSCI's broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.7%.
The materials sector was the biggest gain in the MSCI index, boosted by a 2.9 jump in shares of mining giant Rio Tinto after it said it plans to sell 13 aluminium assets, trimming the business it expanded with the badly timed $39bn acquisition of Alcan four years ago.
US stocks rose on Friday, with the S&P 500 up 1.7%, on optimism about Europe and after strong earnings from Google, as Wall Street shares notched up their first back-to-back weekly gains since early July.
The CBOE Volatility Index , also known as the Vix or Wall Street's "fear gauge", fell 8%, an indicator that risk appetite was returning.
S&P futures advanced 0.6% in Asia on Monday.
Euro steady
The euro held firm after posting its biggest weekly gain in 9 months last week. The single currency traded around $1.3854, down a touch on the day but well off a 9-month trough of $1.3144 set on October 4.
"After the developments at the latest summit, we can assume that at long last concrete measures to solve the crisis will be implemented next weekend," said Sumino Kamei, senior currency analyst, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.
Such measures are broadly assumed to include a plan to make Greece's debts more manageable through bigger "haircuts" than have already been agreed for private bondholders and bolstering the firepower of the eurozone's rescue fund.
If EU leaders fall short of the "grand plan" to address the region's sovereign debt and banking woes that markets are now expecting, the euro will quickly come under renewed pressure, traders warned.
Hopes of significant progress in Europe have also brought relief to Asian credit markets, with spreads on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment grade index tightening further on Monday. The index has now tightened by a dramatic 26 basis points over the past week.
Growing risk appetite also reduced demand for safe-haven government bonds, with the benchmark Japanese government bond 10-year yield rising 1 basis point to 1.025%.
US Treasury 10-year yields rose around 2.5 basis points to 2.2764%, after climbing 19 basis points last week, while the dollar firmed 0.1% against a basket of currencies.
In commodities markets, copper edged up 0.1% to $7 554 a tonne and oil was also higher, with Brent crude up 0.2% at $112.43 a barrel and US crude up 0.5% at $87.21.
Gold, which in recent months has switched from a negative to a positive correlation with riskier assets such as industrial commodities and stocks as safe haven investors turned instead to the dollar, rose 0.1% to around $1 680.70 an ounce, after its biggest weekly gain since early September last week.