ASIA HOLD GAINS, ALIBABA UP Asia's stock markets held recent gains on Thursday as investors weighed whether a break-up of Chinese conglomerate Alibaba signalled Beijing's regulatory storm aimed at tech companies might finally be clearing. MSCI's index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.5%. Like the S&P 500 it has recovered from March lows hit as fallout from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank reverberated around global markets. Japan's Nikkei , which is heading for a 6% quarterly gain, slipped 0.3% on Thursday. The U.S. dollar was firm, particularly against the safe-haven Japanese yen , as investors wound back some of the positions built up in the last couple of weeks. The yen last traded at 132.495 to the dollar. From the two-year tenor all the way to the 30-year, U.S. yields are below the current Fed funds rate of roughly 4.8% as markets have dramatically re-priced the rates outlook. Two-year yields were little changed at 4.0804%. In Asia, investors were cheering plans from Alibaba to spin off and separately list its business units as another signal that China wants to welcome back global capital. "We have repeatedly emphasised that 2023 is the first time in four years that economic, regulatory, and COVID policies have been aligned in a pro-growth, pro-business fashion," Morgan Stanley analysts said. Alibaba shares in Hong Kong, which rose above HK$300 in 2020, traded up 2.5% at HK$96 on Thursday. The broader Hang Seng was up 0.6%. Elsewhere, Brent oil futures steadied at $78.79 a barrel, up 0.65%, and gold , which has surged over the past few weeks, was up 0.3% at $1,969 an ounce. The euro was firmer against the dollar at $1.08755, while bitcoin was up 1% at $28,646 and set for its best quarter for two years. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ World FX rates YTD Global asset performance Asian stock markets Whirlwind month for European banks ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Huw Jones, additional reporting by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Sonali Paul, Sam Holmes, Christina Fincher and Alex Richardson)