By Tom Westbrook
SINGAPORE (Reuters) — China led Asia's stock markets higher on Wednesday as investors cheered the approval of a trillion-yuan sovereign bond issue as a harbinger of stimulus, while the Aussie dollar hit a two-week high as hotter-than-expected inflation lifted rate forecasts.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.9% and the Hang Seng 2%. Japan's Nikkei rose 1.1%.
Bonds have held onto a bounce-back after the 10-year Treasury yield breached 5% on Monday, with the benchmark yield firm at 4.82% in Tokyo trade. [US/]
Overnight solid earnings and U.S. economic data lifted Wall Street indexes, while oil and the euro had dropped on weaker-than-forecast purchasing managers surveys on the continent. U.S. and European stock futures were steady in early Asia trade.
China's top parliament approved a 1 trillion yuan ($137 billion) bond issue, state media reported adding the funds would be spent rebuilding disaster zones and improving infrastructure.
Also helping the mood was state-owned investment company Central Huijin announcing it was buying exchange-traded funds, a move which has sparked strong rallies in the past.
«Government expenditure will help the economy to stabilise further and strengthen growth in the fourth quarter,» said Steven Leung, executive director of institutional sales at broker UOB Kay Hian in Hong Kong.
Central Huijin promising ETF purchases drove rallies of more than 20% in 2013 and 2015, according to UOB, and Leung said the signal had given a strong boost to sentiment.
China's blue-chip CSI300 index, which had been pinned near four-year lows, bounced 1%. [.SS]
HIKE LOOMS DOWN UNDER
In currency markets, the euro made its steepest drop for two weeks overnight, falling
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