SYDNEY/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Asian shares climbed on Tuesday as investors wagered China’s economic strength would help underpin growth in the region, even as pandemic lockdowns threatened to lengthen the road to recovery in the West. Data out on Monday had confirmed the world’s second-largest economy was one of the few to grow over 2020 and actually picked up speed as the year closed. European markets appeared set for a higher open with Euro Stoxx 50 futures up 0.5% and London’s FTSE gaining 0.4%. Those of Germany’s DAX rose 0.64%. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan firmed 1.61%, to be a whisker from record highs. Japan’s Nikkei bounced 1.53%, recovering all the losses suffered on Monday when caution had dominated markets. Australian shares climbed 1.19% as investors bet on news that Queensland state was set to lift virus-led restrictions and on prospects of better production numbers from local miners. Chinese blue-chips dipped 1.47%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng advanced 2.1%, helped by steady and robust demand from investors in mainland China for shares in the Asian financial hub. Mainland investors purchased 18.9 billion yuan ($2.91 billion) worth of Hong Kong stocks on Tuesday via the Stock Connect linking mainland and Hong Kong, after spending a record HK$23 billion on Monday, according to HKEX and Refinitiv data. On Wall Street, U.S. stocks also looked a little steadier as futures for the S&P 500 added 0.67% and NASDAQ futures 0.97%. Analysts at JPMorgan felt the coming earnings season could brighten the mood given the consensus in Europe was for a fall of 25% year-on-year, setting a very low bar. “The projected EPS growth in Europe now stands at the lows of the crisis which seems too conservative, and could likely lead to positive surprises over the reporting season,” they wrote in a note. The same could be true for the United States where results from BofA, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Netflix are due this week. For now, dealers were cautious ahead of U.S. President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration given the risk of more mob violence, along with doubts about how much of his fiscal stimulus package will pass Republican opposition in Congress. Janet Yellen, Biden’s nominee to run the Treasury Department, will tell the Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday that the government must “act big” with the coronavirus relief plan. “Biden will not want the risk of a double-dip recession to escalate,” said analysts at ANZ in a note. The full $1.9 trillion proposal combined with stimulus already agreed would amount to 10% of GDP. “That would be sufficient to close any output gap and underpin a gradual recovery in inflation as demand firms,” they wrote. “But it will be a difficult winter, and investors will need renewed confidence in the inflation trade before established earlier trends reassert themselves.” Wall Street is also bracing for tougher regulations now that the Democrats control the Senate, with Biden set to nominate two consumer champions to top financial agencies. In bond markets, 10-ye