Asian shares rose on Friday, taking their cue from a jump in oil prices as well as gains on Wall Street after minutes of the Federal Reserve's latest meeting led investors to further pare bets that the central bank will hike interest rates this year.
Oil prices climbed to their highest in three months on Thursday, after forecaster PIRA Energy Group predicted crude prices would rise to $70 per barrel by the end of 2016.
Crude oil futures extended overnight gains, with Brent adding 0.4% to $53.28 a barrel, while US crude was 0.5% higher at $49.66.
The Fed minutes revealed the extent to which policymakers are concerned that a global economic slowdown might threaten the US economic outlook. Though they said overseas turmoil had not "materially altered" economic prospects, they opted to hold interest rates steady last month.
"When the dust settled the message for the market was that the FOMC was pretty confident on the robustness of the US economy and saw room for 2015 lift-off, but no imperative to do so if fragility persisted," Steven Englander, global head of currency strategy at Citi, said in a note.
Riskier asset markets, which had risen when the Fed held off raising rates in September, got a further boost on confirmation policy makers won't rush to tighten rates at a time of slackening global growth.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was up 0.7% in early trading, on track for a robust weekly gain of 5.7%.
The S&P 500 closed at a seven-week high on Thursday, though S&P 500 e-mini futures edged down about 0.1% in early Asian trading.
Japan's Nikkei stock index added 1%, poised to gain 3.4% for the week.
The dollar withered in line with fading near-term rate-hike expectations, with the dollar index down about 0.1% in early Asian trade, on track for a weekly loss of 0.6%.
The euro rose about 0.1% to $1.1285 after scaling a three-week peak of $1.1328 on Thursday, while the dollar was steady against its Japanese counterpart at 119.91 yen.
Gold added about 0.1% to $1,140.01 an ounce, on track for a weekly gain of about 0.2%, after volatile trading in the wake of the Fed minutes. A delayed hike to interest rates could support gold in the near term.
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