The markets across Asia ended mixed on Thursday as traders preferred to lock in gains and preferred to move to side lines as fresh concerns about sustaining the pace and magnitude of economic recovery resurfaced yet again on weaker than expected economic data related to housing starts and building permits in the U.S. While the markets in Japan, Hong kong, Taiwan, Indonesia and India in negative territory, the markets in Australia, South Korea, Singapore and China ended in positive territory with modest gains.
In Japan, the benchmark Nikkei 225 Index declined 127.33 points, or 1.3%, to 9549, and the broader Topix index of all First Section issues fell 12.35 points, or 1.5%, to 838.
On the economic front, data released by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry revealed that all-industry activity dropped a seasonally adjusted 0.6% month-on-month in September, compared to the 0.9% increase in the previous month. Economists had expected the index to remain flat in September. On a yearly basis, all industry activity plunged 7.1% in September, faster than the downwardly revised 6.7% decrease in the preceding month.
Separately, the Cabinet Office revealed that the country's leading index was unchanged from its preliminary estimate at 86.4 in September. In August, the leading index stood at 83.2. The coincident index rose to 92.7 in September from 91.2 in the previous month. The reading for September was revised up from 92.5 reported initially. At the same time, the lagging index rose to 84.6 from 84.1 in the preceding month. Light sweet crude oil futures for December delivery ended at $79.47 a barrel in electronic trading, down $0.11 per barrel from previous close at $79.58 a barrel in New York on Wednesday.
Banking stocks led the declines on concerns about equity financing plans of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial. Among the stocks, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial fell 4.13%, Mizuho Financial slumped 6.06% and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial lost 4.56%. Resona Holdings, however, bucked the trend and ended in positive territory with a gain of 0.73%.
Automotive stocks also ended in negative territory on stronger yen. Honda Motor lost 3.52%, Suzuki Motor Corp. fell 3.46%, Toyota Motor Corp. shed 1.69% Mitsubishi Motors slumped 6.87% and Nissan Motor Co. slipped 0.62%.
Exporters also ended sharply lower on strengthening of the local currency against the dollar. Canon Inc. lost 3.18%, Sharp Corp. fell 2.44% and Sony Corp. declined 2.18%.
Mitsubishi Rayon was the major gainer, having surged 29.52% after Mitsubishi Chemicals revealed that it would acquire the former through a tender offer. The stock of Mitsubishi Chemicals declined 5.16%.
Real Estate stocks also ended in negative territory after Japan Real Estate Investment revealed plans to raise 31.8 billion yen through issue of fresh shares. Among the real estate stocks, Mitsubishi Estate declined 2.98%, Sumitomo Realty & Development fell 1.56%, Mitsui Fudosan & Co., slipped 0.29% and Tokyu Land Corp. shed 0.68%.
Shipping related stocks ended weaker. Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha slumped 4.90%, Mitsui OSK Lines declined 1.13% and Nippon Yusen fell 2.66%.
In Australia, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 Index gained 10.20 points, or 0.22% to close at 4,749, while the All-Ordinaries Index ended at 4,768, representing a gain of 8.20 points, or 0.17%.
On the economic front, data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics revealed that average weekly wage in the country rose 5.2% year-over-year during August, following 6.1% annual increase in July. The data further revealed for the three-month period ended August, weekly wages rose 0.9% over the preceding three months. In the three months to July, wages rose 1.2%. In a separate statement, the Reserve Bank of Australia revealed that total foreign exchange transactions during October declined sharply to A$307 million from A$830 recorded in the previous month of September.
Light sweet crude oil futures for December delivery ended at $79.47 a barrel in electronic trading, down $0.11 per barrel from previous close at $79.58 a barrel in New York on Wednesday.
Metals and mining stocks led the gains in the market which showed signs of fatigue or loss of steam midway through the session. Among metal stocks BHP Billiton gained added 0.62%. Rio Tinto, Fortescue Metals and Iluka Resources recovered early losses and ended unchanged from previous close. Gindalbie Metals, however, bucked the trend and declined 3.68% and Oz Minerals slipped 0.77%.
Oil stocks also ended in positive territory on higher crude oil prices in the international market. Woodside Petroleum gained 1.17%, Santos edged up 0.13%, and Oil Search rose 1.20%. However, Origin Energy bucked the trend and ended lower by 1.17%.
Mixed trading was witnessed among gold related stocks . Lihir Gold gained 1.14% and, Newcrest Mining rose 1.55%. However, Sino Gold Mining slipped 0.62%.
Banking stocks ended in positive territory. ANZ Bank added 0.41%, Commonwealth Bank of Australia advanced 1.49%, National Australia Bank gained 1.08% and Westpac Banking edged up 0.08%.
Retail stocks also ended in negative territory. David Jones shed 1.04%, JB Hi-Fi fell 2.00%, Wesfarmers slipped 0.68% and Woolworths lost 0.42%. Harvey Norman managed to remain unchanged from previous close.
In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index ended in negative territory with a loss of 197.17 points, or 0.86% at 22,643, as traders preferred to lock in gains following recent gains and moved to sidelines amid cautious trading. Fresh concerns about the sustainability of global recovery resurfaced yet again after economic data related to housing starts and building permits declined more than expected in the U.S., and the consumer price inflation inched marginally higher. Weak closing in Wall Street on economic data as well as profit taking in other markets also impacted market sentiment. In South Korea, the KOSPI Index ended in positive territory with a gain of 16.57 points, or 1.03% to 1,621, defying the weak closing in Wall Street in the previous session and cautious trading amid other markets in the region. Foreign institutional investors evinced fresh buying interest in blue chip stocks stating that the market is under-valued. Most blue-chip technology stocks led the gains in the market.
Doubts about the pace of global economic recovery, the dollar's rebound against major global currencies, including the rupee, and signs of fatigue after a 75% plus rally since March dragged the Indian market sharply lower on Thursday. The BSE Sensex closed at 16,786, down 213 points or 1.25% and the S&P CNX Nifty fell 66 points or 1.30% to 4,989
Among the other major markets in the region, China's Shanghai Composite Index gained 17.38 points or 0.53% to close at 3,321 and Singapore's Strait Times Index rose 13.75 points, or 0.50% to close at 2,759, However, Indonesia's Jakarta Composite Index declined 15.44 points, or 0.62% to close at 2,469 and Taiwan's Weighted Index shed 6.71 points, or 0.09%, to close at 7,760. |