Asian stocks touched their highest in more than four months on Monday and gold, oil and copper hovered near multi-month highs, after rallying late last week on hopes that fresh stimulus from the world's top central banks will support flagging growth.
The dollar languished near its lowest in seven months, as the aggressive new securities-buying programme announced by the Federal Reserve on Thursday tempted investors back into riskier assets such as equities and commodities.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan crept up 0.3%, having reached its highest level since early May earlier in the session. Tokyo markets were closed for a holiday.
But European shares were seen opening lower as the initial euphoria prompted by the Fed's move fades and some investors opt to lock in profits. Bookmakers called the major indexes in London, Paris and Frankfurt to fall around 0.5%.
"The stimulus from the Fed is aiming deliberately at building confidence (in the economy) rather than pushing asset prices higher," said CMC Markets chief strategist Michael McCarthy in Sydney. "The technical picture means we are on a knife edge and the short-term risk is more to the downside."
Most of the regional gains came in the growth-sensitive materials and energy sectors.
"The materials sector has broken out of a downtrend," said IG Markets analyst Stan Shamu in Melbourne.
Indian shares were among the leading gainers in Asia, rising 0.8% to a 14-month high after the government unveiled a raft of major economic reforms late on Friday, including opening the supermarket sector to foreign retailers.
LIQUIDITY BOOST
The tone has been bullish in financial markets since the European Central Bank said on September 6 it would intervene in the bond markets to drive down the borrowing costs of struggling euro zone members.
The MSCI Asia ex-Japan has climbed more than 7.5% since September 5.
A second monetary shot-in-the-arm was delivered by the Fed, which said it would pump $40 billion into the economy each month until the jobs market shows sustained improvement, powering U.S. stocks to their highest close in nearly five years on Friday.
S&P 500 futures traded in Asia edged down 0.2%, suggesting a slight pullback when trading resumes on Wall Street.
So-called quantitative easing, in which the Fed creates money to buy assets, tends to support stocks and commodities due to the increased liquidity flowing into markets, but the flood of dollars can weigh on the U.S. currency.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of major currencies, eased 0.1% Monday, having fallen on Friday to levels not seen since late February.
The euro fetched around $1.3137, up 0.1% on the day but below a four-month peak of $1.3169 set on Friday. It has soared nearly 10% from a 25-month trough around $1.2042 plumbed in July.
"The euro looks firm, there is no question about that," said Satoshi Okagawa, senior global markets analyst for Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation in Singapore. "I think it would be good to sell the euro at some point, but maybe not today," he said, adding that the euro looked firm on technical charts in the wake of its rise above the $1.30 level.
COMMODITIES RALLY
Oil prices were also firm, with Brent crude rising for the eighth straight session to just shy of $117 a barrel, while U.S. crude edged above $99 a barrel.
While central bank stimulus has so far been positive for oil, Brent crude's rally of about a third since late June could backfire by undermining demand in a fragile economy.
"The current price certainly doesn't do any favours for a global economy that is struggling to get back on track. A price rally like we are seeing now is only going to do more damage," said Victor Shum, managing director of consultancy IHS Purvin & Gertz.
"Fundamentals at the moment are not indicative of these prices, and I don't see oil being able to sustain this rally."
Copper prices fell 0.5% to around $8,335 a tonne. Analysts have been cautious on prospects for prolonged growth in industrial metals prices given slowing activity in top consumer China, and because the stimulus measures will take time to feed through to the real economy.
Oil and copper reached four-and-a-half month highs late last week.
Gold, traditionally seen as a store of value by investors worried that central bank money-printing will ultimately stoke inflation, firmed around 0.3% to about $1,775 an ounce near its highest level in seven months.
"Gold is still pretty bullish this week. I think gold prices will remain firm and probably test the high set in February," Lynette Tan, an analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore.