Asian stock markets are mostly down in the red on Friday with investors indulging in some selling in a few blue chips from stocks across various sectors amid a lack of prominent triggers. The overnight flat close on Wall Street and lower commodity prices appear to be dragging down stock prices. Concerns about Greece's debt worries are also hurting sentiment to an extent.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index, which declined to around 4,876, is trading at 4,888, down 19.4 points or 0.4% from its previous close. The broader All Ordinaries index is down 17.8 points or 0.3% at 4,919.
Among key bank stocks, Commonwealth Bank of Australia is down by over 1%, ANZ Bank is trading lower by 0.5% and Westpac Banking Corporation is down marginally, while National Australia Bank is in positive territory with a modest gain. Diversified financials stock Macquarie Group is trading lower by about 1%.
Top miners BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto are trading lower by 0.6% and 0.4% respectively. Newcrest Mining is gaining about 0.7%. Bluescope Steel and Incitec Pivot are trading marginally higher, while Fortescue Metals and Orica are exhibiting weakness.
Lihir Gold Ltd has lifted the full year production guidance for the year to a range of 1 million-1.1 million ounces. In its first-quarter production report, Lihir Gold reported production of 229,757 ounces in the quarter, down 17% on the previous three-month period. Production for the March quarter was down 26.43% on the equivalent period a year earlier. Shares of Lihir Gold are trading modestly higher.
Energy stock Woodside Petroleum is down more than a percent after the company reported a 7% drop in production in the first quarter of 2010, despite record LNG production from the North West Shelf. Woodside posted a production of 19.2 million barrels of oil equivalent in the quarter ended March 31, down from 20.6 mmboe in the prior corresponding quarter in 2009. Woodside said sales revenue of US$1.028 billion was down 10% on the December quarter, but up 43% on the prior corresponding quarter ending March 31, 2009.
Santos, Oil Search and Origin Energy are also trading weak. Oil Search Ltd says it expects to produce 7.2 million-7.4 million barrels of oil equivalent this year, and will reinvest a big portion of its earnings from the ExxonMobil-led Papua New Guinea liquefied natural gas project into growth opportunities.
The Federal Court has upheld an appeal from CSR Ltd against an earlier rejection of its proposal to demerge its sugar business. The plan will see the split of CSR's sugar and renewable energy business and its listing on the Australian Securities Exchange as Sucrogen. CSR's building products operations will remain under the CSR name, and be the sole carrier of the company's asbestos liabilities. The CSR stock is up nearly 9% now.
In the currency market, the Australian dollar opened marginally lower amid worries about Greece defaulting on its sovereign debt. In early trades, the Aussie was quoting at US$0.9277-US$0.9280, down slightly from Thursday's close of US$0.9283-US$0.9286. The Australian dollar is trading at 0.9256 to the U.S. dollar.
The Japanese stock market is trading weak with investors not showing any keen interest in picking up stocks amid concerns about Greece's debt woes. The market did bounce back into positive territory after early weakness, but has faltered again due to lack of support at higher levels.
The benchmark Nikkei 225 index, which rebounded to 10,967 after early weakness, was down 34.26 points or 0.31% at 10,914.83 at the end of the morning session.
Shares of Honda Motor Co. traded higher on reports the firm's group operating profit likely expanded about 90% year on year to around 360 billion yen in the year ended March.
Nippon Light Metals, Daiichi Sankyo, Mitsui OSK Lines, Nippon Sheet Glass, Nippon Yusen, Seven & I Holdings, Mitsubishi Chemicals, Kobe Steel and Sumitomo Chemicals are trading notably lower
Banking stocks Shinsei Bank, Bank of Yokohama, Shizuoka Bank and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial are exhibiting weakness.
Yahoo Japan Corp., Pioneer Corp., Aeon, Mitsui & Co., Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Mitsubishi Estates, Sumco and Pacific Metals are trading firm.
JFE Holdings Inc. shares are trading higher on reports JFE Steel Corp. will propose a new steel pricing system.
In the currency market, the U.S. dollar traded in the mid-93 yen level in early deals in Tokyo. The yen is trading at 93.46 to the U.S. dollar.
After an early surge, the South Korean market drifted lower and is currently down in the red amid cautious trades.
The benchmark KOSPI index, which edged up to 1,748.5 in early trading, is currently down 4.5 points or 0.26% at 1,735.
Among bank stocks, Korea Exchange Bank and KB Financial are trading modestly lower, while Woori Finance is down with a loss of 1.4%. Shinhan Financial, however, is up in positive territory with a modest gain.
In the technology space, LG Display LCD is up 2.75%, LG Electronics is gaining about 0.5% and Hynix Semiconductor is up marginally, while heavyweight Samsung Electronics is trading lower by about 1%.
Shipping stocks Hyundai Heavy Industries, Samsung Heavy Industries and Daewoo Shipbuilding are trading lower by 1.5%-2.5%. STX Pan Ocean is trading flat.
Among automobile stocks, Kia Motor is trading flat, Hyundai Motor is up 2% and Ssangyong Motor is trading lower by about 1%. Airliners Korean Air and Asiana Airlines are down 0.8% and 1.3% respectively.
Among steelmakers, Hyundai Steel is up 2.4%, while POSCO is down with a loss of 0.7%. Oil and telecommunications stocks are also exhibiting a mixed trend.
Among other markets in the Asia-Pacific region, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Indonesia and Singapore are trading weak, while Malaysia, New Zealand and Taiwan are trading higher. Markets across the region ended mostly lower on Thursday.
On Wall Street, stocks rebounded after initial weakness and finished with moderate gains on Thursday, as reassuring comments from President Barack Obama regarding financial regulatory reform prompted a recovery. The major averages all finished in positive territory, with the Nasdaq climbing to its best closing level since June of 2008.
The Dow gained 9.4 points or 0.1% to end at 11,134.3, the Nasdaq advanced by 14.5 points or 0.6% to 2,519.1 and the S&P 500 edged up 2.7 points or 0.2% to 1,208.7.
Major European markets closed on the downside on Thursday. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 and the German DAX index both slid by 1%, while the French CAC 40 index ended lower by 1.3%.
Oil prices recovered from early lows and ended flat on Thursday, as traders weighed a batch of mostly encouraging economic data against a stronger dollar and continuing worries about Greece's debt situation.
Crude oil for June delivery settled up US$0.02 at US$83.70 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The prices rallied over 20% since early February to an 18-month high above US$87 early this month, and have struggled for direction since then. |