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The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 45 countries, hit a new record high of 442.13 points before pulling back. It was last down 0.1%.
Chinese shares hit fresh seven-year highs, led by heavyweight state-owned enterprises after state media reported the central government would, through mergers and acquisitions, drastically slash the number of conglomerates it controls.
The CSI300 index, which has almost doubled since late October, closed 2.2% higher.
Caution before a Bank of Japan policy decision on Thursday weighed on Japanese shares and the Nikkei 225 index ended down 0.2%.
Nonetheless, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.6%.
The rally in Asia came after shares in Amazon and Microsoft both jumped more than 10% on Friday on strong revenues, driving the Nasdaq Composite Index to a record high.
The dollar was up 0.2% against a basket of major currencies but still close to Friday’s 2 1/2-week low.
The Fed begins a two-day policy meeting on Tuesday with a slew of recent sub-par indicators prompting analysts to downgrade their view of the US economic outlook and to push back expectation of when the Fed will hike rates for the first time since June 2006 until later this year.
The dollar was up 0.2% at 119.18 yen and flat against the euro at $1.0872.
“It may be that the market is looking to get back into dollar longs and I think the extent to which the Fed is prepared to look through this weaker patch of data will be the important element this week,” said Ian Stannard, European head of FX strategy at Morgan Stanley in London.
Low-risk
Worries over Greece, which faces running out of cash within weeks unless it can reach agreements in talks that appear to be going nowhere, pushed yields on Greek government bonds higher and those on low-risk German debt lower.
German 10-year yields last stood at 0.14%, down 1.4 basis points.
“The Greek event risks are still prominent – we would argue that Bund yields should actually be higher over the long term if Greece was to exit, as the resultant euro zone would have less economic variance between member states – but in the near term the uncertainty should still keep demand for the “risk-free rate” (Bunds) in place,” said Mizuho strategist Peter Chatwell.
Brent crude oil prices held near a 4 1/2-month high above $65 a barrel, supported by worry that fighting in Yemen might disrupt supplies, and a fall in the number of active US drilling rigs to its lowest since 2010. Brent last traded seven cents lower at $65.21 a barrel.
Gold traded not far from a five-week low as strength in stock markets undermined its safe-haven appeal and as investors focused on the Fed meeting. Spot gold stood at $1,183 an ounce.