Asian markets advance on Wall Street's gains
The major markets across the Asia-Pacific region advanced for the fourth day in succession, led by financials. However, the rally seems to be losing steam, with profit taking in select stocks and a slump in metals generating some selling pressure. Except Australia, all the other markets in the region ended in the green.
Crude oil ended $0.71 down in Asian trading at $48.45 a barrel in electronic trading, after having closed at $49.16 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Tuesday. In the New York session, the commodity gained, $1.81 after hitting an intraday low of $46.53 and a high of $49.82.
Japan The benchmark Nikkei 225 Index, having opened strongly above the 8,000 mark in early trading on Wall Street cues, could not sustain at higher levels and declined sharply by the mid-session on the negative outlook for the gaming console makers. A report from the World Bank revising the GDP forecast for China to 6.5% from 7.5% also also led to some weakness.
However, the index recovered in late afternoon trading to close at 7,972, while the broader Topix Index of all First Section issues advanced 4.03 points or 0.5% to 765.
The Bank of Japan, at the conclusion of the 2-day meeting revealed that interest rates have been left unchanged at 0.10%. The Bank also stated that it would buy 1.8 trillion yen of government bonds each month, up from 1.4 trillion yen now. The new measure is expected to help commercial banks increase lending. On Tuesday, the Bank outlined plans to provide as much as 1 trillion yen of subordinated loans to banks to revive lending and replenish capital sapped by falling stocks. These measures are expected to lend the much-needed support to the banks to combat recession and spur economic growth.
Among the banking stocks, Resona Holdings surged up 5.37%, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group surged up 3.35%, Mizuho Financial advanced 3.00%, and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial added 0.21%.
Gaming console manufacturers declined after Deutsche Bank downgraded Ninetendo's stock on lower profit outlook for next year. Leading gaming company Nintendo declined more than 4.9% following the downgrade.
Exporters ended mixed, with Canon losing 0.93%, while Sharp advanced 2.45% and Sony added 0.40%. Automakers also ended mixed; Toyota Motor gained 0.66%, while Honda motor shed 0.86%.
Oil-related stocks gained following the overnight rise in crude oil price. Inpex gained 0.76%, and Showa Shell rose 0.59%. Nippon Oil, however, ended unchanged. Trading houses also ended higher; Mitsubishi Corp rose 1.33%, Itochu gained 0.45%, and Sumitomo Corp. advanced 0.49%.
Australia
In Sydney, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 shed 5.6 points, or 0.16% to close at 3,446, while the broader All Ordinaries Index dropped 7.2% or 0.21% to end at 3.386.
Resource stocks led the declines after Goldman Sachs cut the rating for Rio Tinto to "sell" from "hold". The brokerage opined that Rio Tinto's proposed deal with Aluminum Company of China, or Chinalco, might not materialize due to concerns about the debt levels of the third biggest mining company in the world.
Rio Tinto declined 8.86% following the downgrade, dragging the indices down. BHP Billiton lost 3.45%, Minara Sources declined 5.17% and Riversdale Mining dropped 6.41%. Oil stocks closed mixed, with Santos advancing 1.39%, while Woodside Petroleum and Oil Search lost 1.39% and 0.39% respectively.
Gold stocks also ended on a mixed note, with Lihir Gold advancing 1.32% while Sinoa-Gold and Newcrest Mining shed 4.98% and 2.71% respectively compared to previous day.
Among retail stocks, David Jones soared 9.24% after reporting a 2.4% rise in profit for the first half and affirming that its second-half profit will rise by 5% despite weak economic conditions and bleak forecast. Coles' owner Wesfarmers gained 1.58%. Woolworths, however, bucked the trend, and closed 0.71% lower.
Financial stocks continued to advance on expectations of stability in the banking sector. Commonwealth Bank added 0.77%, ANZ Bank advanced 2.49%, National Australia Bank ended 0.95% higher and Westpac Banking gained 0.51%.
South Korea
In Seoul, the benchmark KOSPI Index, gained 6.07 points or 0.52% and ended at 1,170,.
The financial watchdog of the economy, Financial Supervisory Services, in a statement revealed that loan default rate of banks rose sharply to a three-year high as slumping economic conditions affected the small businesses the most. The delinquency ratio of banks rose to 1.67% in February, up 0.17% from January, the statement noted.
Blue chip stocks were the major gainers during the day. Market Heavyweight Samsung Electronics advanced 1.12%. Technology stock Hynix Semiconductor soared more than 4.5%, and LG Electronics gained 1.49%.
Shipbuilders advanced on a stronger local currency. Hyundai Heavy Industries and Samsung Heavy Industries gained more than 1% each.
Financial stocks are trading mixed; Shinhan Financial Group advanced 2.78% while Woori Finance and KB Financial Group declined 0.55% and 2.31% respectively.
Hong Kong
The benchmark Hang Seng Index advanced 1.86% or 239.08 points to 13,117, on positive cues from the US market.
Among the financials, HSBC Holdings advanced 5.77%, BOC Hong Kong gained 2.41%, Bank of East Asia surged 3.10% and Bank of China added 2.15%. However, Hang Seng Bank declined 0.70% on profit taking. In the resource space, Petrochina gained 2.23% and CNOOC advanced 2.65%. Aluminum Company of China or Chalco, however, shed 2.83% following reports that the deal between the company and Rio Tinto might not materialize.
Insurance stocks were trading mixed, with China Life advancing 1.88% while Ping An closed lower by 0.23%. Among telecom stocks, Hutchison Whimpoa advanced 3.36% and China Mobile added 1.49%. Utility stocks ended lower, with HK & China Gas shedding 0.87% and HK Electric dropping 0.97% from earlier close.
Other markets
Among the other major markets in the region, China's Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.24% or 5.40 points to 2,224; Singapore's Strait Times Index advanced 1.08% or 16.91 points to 1,576; Indonesia's Jakarta Composite Index is up 10.75 points or 0.82% at 1,383; and Taiwan's Weighted Index ended at 5,048, up 6.15 points or 0.12%. |