Asian stock markets extended their rally today after Wall Street surged on hopes a U.S. plan to rid banks of festering debts at the heart of the financial crisis will revive growth. European markets were mixed in early trade.
Financial firms jumped, Japanese exporters rose on the sliding yen, and South Korean stocks got a boost from plans for massive stimulus spending. The gains came after U.S. stock benchmarks jumped around 7 percent or more yesterday.
Investors worldwide appeared heartened by the Obama administration's move to clean up as much as $1 trillion in toxic securities and loans weighing down bank balance sheets -- a key part of the government's arsenal aimed at restoring consumer and company lending so crucial to economic activity.
A dose of better-than-expected news about the other big U.S. economic problem -- the housing slump -- added to the upbeat mood. Data showing a surprise increase in home sales fostered hopes the hard-hit housing industry might finally be stabilizing.
Asian markets have risen sharply recently, with Japan and Hong Kong's indexes each surging a stunning 20 percent over the last two weeks.
But analysts cautioned investor sentiment, while recovering in the short term, was still fragile. Doubts about the U.S. plans -- about how to price the assets and account for losses, among other issues -- could smother in the coming days what many believe is still an abridged rally in a longer bearish trend.