* South Korea's KOSPI crosses 9,000 pts for first time
* Bank Indonesia raises benchmark rate to 5.75%
* Taiwan's cenbank holds rate at 2% as expected
By Avinash P and Ragini Mathur
June 18 (Reuters) - An index tracking emerging-market
equities edged higher on Thursday, and heavyweight South Korean
stocks hit a record, as sentiment improved after the presidents
of the United States and Iran signed a peace deal.
Hopes rose for a quick reopening of the crucial Strait of
Hormuz waterway as Washington and Tehran released the text of
their interim pact. Brent crude futures fell more than
2%, soothing fears of energy-market disruption and inflation.
MSCI's emerging-market equities index rose 0.2%,
but kept within reach of its June 3 record high.
South Korea's KOSPI jumped 2.3%, crossing the
9,000-point mark for the first time and extending gains for a
sixth straight session in its longest winning streak since
February.
Chipmakers SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics ( SSNLF )
jumped 6.5% and 4.6%, respectively. They have been
major drivers of gains on the index, which has more than doubled
in value this year.
Taiwan's benchmark rose 1.3% and its currency
firmed against the dollar. The central bank kept its benchmark
interest rates at 2%, as expected.
HAWKISH FED TONE LIFTS U.S. DOLLAR, PRESSURES EM FX
The U.S. Federal Reserve kept interest rates unchanged in
Kevin Warsh's first policy meeting as chair, as expected,
despite inflation that is well above target.
Still, the central bank struck a hawkish tone, with
policymakers' projections pointing to a rate hike this year.
That pushed the dollar to a more than two-month high,
as the prospect of higher U.S. rates increased its yield appeal.
"Assuming the ceasefire takes full effect, many currencies
around the world can look for further relief, even if the Fed's
stance has now raised the bar for performance," said Geoff Yu,
EMEA macro strategist at BNY.
But, he added, "For affected central banks, changing policy
stances so early into a relief rally risks pushing financial
conditions excessively low in a dollar ascendancy phase and
re-introducing inflation or exchange rate risk."
Emerging market currencies felt the pressure with MSCI's
currency gauge falling 0.5%.
Indonesia's central bank raised its benchmark rate by 25
basis points to 5.75%, just a week after a surprise off-cycle
hike, moving again to support the battered rupiah, one of the
year's worst-performing emerging-market currencies.
The rupiah edged 0.2% higher, while domestic stocks
fell 0.8%.
On the flip side, the Indian rupee appreciated
0.3%, touching its strongest in six weeks against the dollar, as
it chased a fifth straight day of gains.
In South Africa, the rand was flat, while the
benchmark stock index fell 1.5%.
Currencies in central Europe were mostly subdued. Equities
were mixed, Polish and Hungarian stocks declined
1.1% and 0.4%, respectively, while the Romanian benchmark
rose 0.9%.
HIGHLIGHTS:
** India's central bank not in favour of offshore settlement
for sovereign bonds, sources say
** South Korea market watchdog warns on leveraged stock
investments
** Philippine central bank raises policy rate by 25 basis
points, as expected
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