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* Aussie dlr at 13-mth high on forecast-beating retail sales
* South Korean won, Taiwan dollar at near one-year high
* Asian shares gain for second straight quarter
By Umesh Desai
HONG KONG, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Asian shares edged higher on Wednesday looking past a surprise fall in U.S. consumer confidence and the Australian dollar jumped to a 13-month high after August retail sales data beat forecasts.
China's main stock market opened higher boosted by the
acquisition plans of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
(ICBC) <601398.SS>, the world's biggest bank by market value,
while the Korean won
"GDP and earnings are still being upgraded, valuations are not horribly expensive and cash is still zero percent, we are in a sweet spot," said Khiem Do, head of the Asia multi-asset group at Baring Asset Management.
He expects the stock rally to sustain and corrections to remain mild for the rest of the year.
Referring to U.S. consumer confidence he said: "It is a volatile data, next month it may be up again and it is very difficult to predict. Its not as if its been falling for months in a a row."
AUSTRALIANS SPEND
The Aussie dollar, which has been on a uptrend after recent market talk about an imminent rate hike lifted its yield allure, received a further boost as data showed consumers continue spending even as the stimulus programme nears its end.
The data took the currency
The Shanghai Composite Index <.SSEC> rose as much as 1
percent after ICBC said it was bidding to buy Thailand's ACL
Bank
Yet, the benchmark stock index has lost around 7 percent so far this quarter and is heading for its worst quarterly performance this year, mainly reflecting worries about an oversupply of shares.
South Korea's won currency
Exporter deals and foreign fund inflows also boosted the
Taiwan dollar
Broadly, Asian stock markets were higher as investors ignored an unexpected fall in U.S. consumer confidence in September, which brought down shares at Wall Street.
The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks traded outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> was up 0.5 percent and is set to post a second straight quarterly gain.
The index is up 21 percent this quarter, adding to the second quarter's 32 percent gains.
Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar slipped against the yen
Traders are not surprised the dollar is reversing track as the broad downtrend for the U.S. currency is still down.
"It's hard to believe dollar selling is over," said Shuichi Kanehira, senior vice president of the forex division at Mizuho Corporate Bank. (Additional reporting by Rika Otsuka in TOKYO; Editing by Jan Dahinten)