Asian shares drift higher, dollar keeps gains 

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Asia share markets made guarded gains on Friday and the dollar held firm in the wake of reassuringly upbeat U.S. retail data, though the mood was cautious as Greek debt talks took yet another confusing turn.

Activity was sparse with MSCI’s index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS up 0.4 percent, but only just above three-month lows.

Japan’s Nikkei .N225 was all but flat though it found some support in a dollar bounce against the yen. South Korea .KS11 managed a gain of 0.6 percent and Shanghai shares.SSEC added 0.7 percent in early trade.

The gains followed a slightly firmer close on Wall Street with the Dow .DJI up 0.22 percent, while the S&P 500 .SPX added 0.17 percent and the Nasdaq .IXIC 0.11 percent.

Sentiment was bolstered by a solid rise in U.S. retail sales which, combined with upward revisions, suggested the economy was warming after a chilly start to the year. [TOP/CEN]

If the momentum is sustained, the Federal Reserve could indeed begin to hike interest rates later in the year, a scenario still favored by many economists.

The news helped the dollar index .DXY up to 95.032, and away from a near one-month low of 94.322 set on Wednesday. Against the yen, the greenback bought 123.50 yen JPY=, well off this week’s trough of 122.46.

The euro had less luck as talks on Greece showed no sign of reaching a deal. The single currency was off at $1.1254 EUR=, from a high of $1.1387 set on Wednesday.

The dip followed the International Monetary Fund’s surprise decision to leave negotiations in Brussels and fly home because of major differences with Athens.

The move came as the European Union told Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to stop gambling with his cash-strapped country’s future and take the crucial decisions needed to avert a devastating default.

Adding to the cautious mood, German newspaper Bild reported Berlin was holding “concrete consultations” on what to do in the case of a bankruptcy of the Greek state, citing several people familiar with the matter.

This includes discussions about introducing capital controls in Greece if the crisis-stricken country goes bankrupt.

In commodity markets, oil prices dipped after Saudi Arabia said it was ready to raise output further to meet strong demand.

Brent crude oil for July LCOc1 fell 35 cents to $64.76 a barrel, while U.S. crude CLc1 lost 33 cents to $60.44.

Source: Reuters – Asian shares drift higher, dollar keeps gains

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