Chinese markets have had a positive start to the week after the People's Bank of China cut benchmark lending rates by 25 bps and after Beijing flagged new measures to support innovative tech companies.
Export figures from Taiwan were a reminder, however, of China's economic predicament. Export orders in September fell short of expectations due to faltering demand from top trading partner China.
Tuesday's calendar in Asia is light, with Hong Kong consumer inflation, South Korean producer price inflation and New Zealand trade the main highlights.
Pipeline price pressures in South Korea appear to be cooling pretty rapidly. Annual PPI in August slumped to 1.6% from 2.6% in July - the steepest month-to-month fall since May last year - and monthly PPI has been negative in two of the last three months.
The International Monetary Fund and World Bank October meetings get underway in Washington, with finance ministry and central bank officials from around the world descending on the U.S. capital to discuss economic and policy issues.
There will be a flurry of press conferences, panel discussions and bilateral meetings over the coming days that will undoubtedly yield market-moving headlines.
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