By Dow Jones
HONG KONG (MarketWatch) -- Asian shares ended mostly higher
Friday, with gold miners leading advancers as the precious metal
hit a record high.
Gold miners rallied as the yellow metal's price surpassed the
high of $1,277.85 per troy ounce, set in New York Thursday. Spot
gold rose $6 to $1,281.50 in Asian trading.
"Gold's rally has coincided with two significant developments in
the currency markets: the Bank of Japan's intervention and the U.S.
Treasury secretary's call for other countries to support the U.S.
on China [currency policy]," HSBC analysts wrote in a note.
"The situation is almost tailor-made for a further gold rally
and helps explain how gold can consistently trade higher, despite
little, if any, inflationary pressure in most of the world," HSBC
added.
The spike lifted shares of Zhaojin Mining Industry Co. (1818.HK)
2.8% in Hong Kong. Zhongjin Gold Co. rose 3.1% in Shanghai, and
Newcrest Mining (NCMGY) added 3.3% in Sydney.
Among the major indexes, Japan's Nikkei Stock Average rose 1.2%,
and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index added 1.3%. Australia's S&P/ASX
200 and Taiwan's Taiex each gained 0.7%, while South Korea's Kospi
advanced 0.9% and India's Sensex climbed 0.9% in afternoon trading.
China's Shanghai Composite declined 0.2%.
In the U.S., Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) futures rose 54
points in screen trade.
In Tokyo, exporter shares boosted the market as the U.S. dollar
remained above the 85-yen level after Japan's market intervention
earlier this week. Most companies were in positive territory, but
trading volumes were modest ahead of Japanese holidays on Monday
and Thursday.
"The intervention [by the Japanese government on Wednesday] has
been more effective in stemming the yen's rise than markets had
initially expected," said Toshikazu Horiuchi, equity strategist at
Cosmo Securities. "But it's hard to buy [stocks] aggressively since
there is a lingering shade of anxiety that the yen may strengthen
if the U.S. carries out additional [monetary] easing," he said.
Shares of Sony Corp.(SNE) rose 1.4%, Nikon Corp. (NINOY) added
4%, and Honda Motor (HMC) gained 1.9%. GS Yuasa advanced 3.3%, and
Mitsubishi Corp. (MSBHY) rose 1.6% on a report they will set up a
joint venture in Europe with Magna International to produce
lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles.
In Hong Kong and Shanghai, banks mostly underperformed as
worries persisted about a possible interest-rate hike from the
People's Bank of China. The concerns surfaced after China's
consumer price index rose 3.5% in August from a year earlier, the
biggest rise since October 2008
"The case for a hike in lending rates is building, but it is too
early for the PBOC to move," said Ben Simpfendorfer, economist at
the Royal Bank of Scotland.
In Shanghai, Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd.
(IDCBY) fell 0.3%, while Agricultural Bank of China dropped
1.1%.
Energy producers moved higher in Hong Kong after Citigroup
analysts wrote in a report Thursday that mainland regulators may
allow them to increase tariffs in some provinces, likely in
October. Datang International Power Generation (DIPGY) climbed
2.7%, and Huadian Power International Corp. (600027.SH) jumped 6%.
In Shanghai, the stocks climbed 0.3% and 3.4%, respectively.
In Seoul, LG Electronics surged 4.7% on news its Chief Executive
Nam Yong has offered to resign, as investors hoped the change in
leadership could improve the firm's fortunes.
In Sydney, successful bond issues by Santos and Asciano further
eased funding concerns for banks, said George Kanaan, UBS head of
sales. National Australia Bank (NABZY) gained 0.7%. Santos jumped
3.6% after raising 650 million euros ($851.5 million) from a hybrid
debt issue.
Leighton Holdings rose 1.3% on news of a proposed takeover of
its German parent Hochtief AG by Spain's Actividades de
Construccion y Servicios S.A.
In Taiwan, banks that won approval from China's banking
regulator to open branches in the mainland were sharply higher.
Chang Hwa Commercial Bank added 3.1%, Taiwan Cooperative Bank
gained 1.9%, and First Financial rose 1.8%.
Elsewhere, Singapore's Straits Times Index rose 0.4%, Indonesian
shares climbed 0.9%, and Thailand's The SET Index slipped 0.1% in
late trading. Earlier in the day, Philippine shares finished 0.7%
lower, while New Zealand's NZX 50 rose 0.5%.
In Thailand, Thai telecom shares slumped after the Central
Administration Court issued an injunction late Thursday against the
upcoming auction of 3G licenses, slated to begin Monday. Advanced
Info Service (AVIFY) tumbled 8.2%, Total Access Communication
(TACYY) slumped 13.2%, and True Corp. (TRUE.TH) plunged 23.5%.
In foreign-exchange trading, the U.S. dollar dropped against
most Asian currencies, although it rose against the Japanese yen.
The greenback was at ¥85.86 compared with ¥85.81 late
in New York, while the euro was at $1.3143 from $1.3085 and at
¥112.82, compared with ¥112.29. Against other Asian
currencies, the dollar weakened to 1,159.90 Korean won from
1,162.55 won, and to 45.85 Indian rupees from 46.15 rupees.
October crude-oil futures rose 47 cents to $75.04 a barrel.