Australia shares gain 0.6%, Asians at 5-month high

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Australian shares climbed to a five-year peak on Monday, drawing confidence from another record high on Wall Street as investors bet the Federal Reserve will put off winding back its cheap money policies until next year.
Many analysts think the Fed will be wary of scaling back its $85 bln-a-month bond-buying programme until the economic impact of a 16-day partial shutdown of the U.S. government is clearer. This view kept the dollar on the defensive.
Investors face a deluge of U.S. data this week as reopened government departments catch up on their work, with Tuesday's September nonfarm payrolls report seen as the most important.
U.S. employers are expected to have taken on 180,000 workers last month, with the unemployment rate steady at 7.3%.
Financial bookmakers expected major European indexes to open flat to up 0.4% on Monday.
Australia's S&P/ASX 200, also supported by data last week showing an improvement in economic growth in China – its biggest export market — scaled a five-year peak, taking the index close to "overbought" territory, an indication that there could be a near-term pullback.
China's CSI 300 index advanced 1.5%, while MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 0.2% to a five-month high.
In New York, the benchmark S&P 500 index rose 0.7% on Friday to close at a second-straight record high, capping its biggest weekly gain in three months on stronger-than-expected earnings from the likes of Google and Morgan Stanley.
Of the 98 S&P 500 companies that have so far reported quarterly earnings, two-thirds either beat or met market expectations, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine.
In terms of valuations, the S&P 500's 12-month forward price-to-earnings ratio stood at 13.9, in line with its 10-year average of 14 and slightly above the Nikkei's 13.5 and the pan-European STOXX Euro 600 index's 12.7.
Tokyo's Nikkei gained 0.7% after earlier hitting a three-week high in relatively light trade. It is up 41% this year, spurred by fiscal and monetary stimulus, and its 30-day implied volatility has risen sharply above that in the United States and Europe, Datastream figures showed.
The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of major currencies, was at 79.686 on Monday, not far from an eight-month low of 79.478 touched on Friday.
The dollar was steady at $1.36765 to the euro after hitting an eight-month low at $1.3704 in the previous session, and up slightly at 98.01 yen.
In the commodity markets, Brent crude was flat at around $109.9 a barrel, building on Friday's 0.8% rise, while gold gained 0.2% to around $1,318 an ounce, having posted its best weekly rise in two months last week.