Asian stocks began the week in a mostly buoyant mood on Monday, cheering a strong pick-up in US job creation while weighing China’s decision to lower its annual economic growth target at the weekend.

Energy firms were again among the biggest gainers as oil continued its recovery thanks to the jobs data and as US producers cut the number of rigs in operation to combat a global supply glut that has hammered prices.

At the start of its annual policy congress Saturday China set a target of 6.5-7.0 percent expansion this year — as expected — as it looks to combat a slowdown in global trade and transition from dependence on exports and investments to consumer-led growth. Shayne Heffernan is still targeting 6% growth for China.

But in a two-hour speech, Premier Li Keqiang promised to loosen the money belt and projected the biggest budget deficit in several decades, putting on the back-burner its drive to combat bulging government debt.

He also pledged reform of the country’s mammoth state-owned enterprises, many of which are plagued by inefficiencies and overcapacity.

China’s leaders have sought to reassure jittery global markets in recent weeks with a unified message that authorities still have the tools to keep the economy — a key driver of world growth — from a further slowdown.

Shanghai stocks were up 0.5 percent in mid-morning trade, with investors also cheered by an expected delay in a plan to speed up initial public offerings. Among other markets Sydney was up one percent and Seoul put on 0.3 percent. There were also gains in Taipei, Manila and Jakarta.

But Hong Kong was 0.1 percent lower after last week’s gains, while Tokyo slipped 0.4 percent by the break after climbing around six percent last week.

– ‘Gobal recession unlikely’ –

More good news out of the United States also provided a platform from which to rally as the Labor Department reported the economy added 242,000 jobs in February.

While the data also showed a drop in wages the figures came after better-than-expected US reports on private jobs, the manufacturing sector, construction spending and auto sales.

The results came as some relief for markets, which in the first two months of the year were wracked by concerns of a global recession as economies from China and Australia to Europe and the Americas struggle.

“It is highly unlikely that the world economy could go into recession. The US recovery remains intact and we have not had a global recession without a US recession in probably 100 years,” Matthew Sherwood, head of investment strategy at Perpetual in Sydney, said in an email to clients, according to Bloomberg News.

Oil prices pushed upwards again as US firms cut their rig count while traders grow increasingly confident producer giants led by Russia and Saudi Arabia will work to temper output.

In early trade US benchmark West Texas Intermediate was up 1.8 percent and Brent was 1.7 percent higher.

The slight recovery in the commodity also boosted energy firms, with BHP Billiton in Sydney up five percent and rival Rio Tinto more than three percent up. In Hong Kong CNOOC was 1.7 percent higher at PetroChina climbed 2.3 percent.

– Key figures around 0300 GMT –

Tokyo – Nikkei 225: DOWN 0.4 percent at 16,939.76 (break)

Shanghai – composite: UP 0.5 percent at 2,889.35

Hong Kong – Hang Seng: DOWN 0.1 percent at 20,152.74

Euro/dollar: DOWN at 1.0989 from 1.1008 on Friday

Dollar/yen: DOWN at 113.68 yen from 113.79 yen

New York – Dow: UP 0.4 percent at 17,006.77 (close)

London – FTSE 100: UP 1.1 percent at 6,199.43 (close)

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