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Asia markets, dollar rally as dealers welcome Yellen

Hong Kong - The dollar extended gains and Asian markets resumed their rally on Wednesday as traders cheered upbeat remarks on the US economy by Federal Reserve boss Janet Yellen and her suggestion interest rates could rise next month.

Wall Street sloughed to record highs for a fourth succession day as Yellen reinforced the view that the world's top economy was in rude health, with the jobs market improving and inflation heading to the Fed's two percent target.

She confirmed the next rate hike could come at any time, which leaves open the possibility of a move at the Fed's March 14-15 policy meeting.

Her remarks, in the first of two days of testimony to Congress, helped drag US markets out of a morning slumber and reinvigorated the greenback against most of its peers.

"The US dollar was on the back foot during the Asian trade (Tuesday), but it got that boost from Yellen, so it will be on a stronger position (Wednesday)," Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at CFD and FX provider AxiTrader.

"She said rates need to rise. That's important because to wait is to risk having to overreact and then knock the economy - and markets - for six."

In early Tokyo exchanges the dollar was at ¥114.40 from ¥114.27 in New York and well up from the ¥113.40 earlier in Asia. The pound and euro was also sharply down from their levels in Asia on Tuesday.

Higher-risk currencies retreated, with Australia's dollar, the South Korean won, Malaysian ringgit and New Zealand dollar all well down.

'Trump rally continues'

Equity markets tracked the US surge. Tokyo shot up 1.2% by the break as the weaker yen helped exporters, while Hong Kong added one percent and Shanghai gained 0.2%.

Sydney pushed 1% higher, Seoul gained 0.3% and Singapore was up 0.6%. Wellington, Taipei and Manila also advanced.

The gains extend a rally that began last week when President Donald Trump promised details of "phenomenal" tax reforms, which raised hopes he will also follow through with other election promises of massive infrastructure spending and deregulation.

"In principle, the Trump rally continues," said Toshihiko Matsuno, chief strategist at SMBC Friend Securities.
"Yellen seemed so positive" towards hiking interest rates, he told AFP.

The big gains in Tokyo's Nikkei came despite another sell-off in troubled conglomerate Toshiba, which plunged more than 13% at one point after warning it faced a ¥390bn loss in the fiscal year to March, hit by a ¥700bn write down at its US nuclear unit Westinghouse.

The news prompted its chairman to resign while it also hinted at another accounting scandal following a profit-padding crisis in 2015.

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