By Daniel Inman
HONG KONG--Asian markets rose Thursday, with gains in the
resource sector helping Australian stocks hit a six-year high.
The S&P ASX 200 rose by as much as 0.8% to 5561.10, putting
it marginally above its April peak of 5554.5, as the market reacted
well to a strong overnight session in the U.S. that pushed the Dow
Jones Industrial Average (DJI) to close at a record high.
The strong trading volume early in Australia's trading day was
inflated by the expiration of July index options, and the market
pared its gains as the session progressed--last trading up 0.5% at
5545.90.
Strong U.S. earnings reports and corporate-deal activity buoyed
investors, as did comments from Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet
Yellen that the central bank would keep interest rates low for an
extended time.
Miners in Australia were adding to gains from the previous
session, brought about by healthy production reports and
better-than-expected Chinese growth data for the second quarter.
Fortescue Metals Group added 3.4% and Rio Tinto was up 1.6%.
Also in Sydney, shares in Woodside Petroleum rose 0.8% after the
company said its sales revenue jumped 25% in the second quarter and
improved its production guidance.
Elsewhere in Asia, South Korea's Kospi gained 0.5%. Japan's
Nikkei rose 0.3%, while the yen (USDJPY) was a touch stronger in
Asian trade, last changing hands at Yen101.56 to the dollar from
Yen101.68 late Wednesday in New York.
In China, stocks were mixed, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index
adding 0.1%, while the Shanghai Composite lost 0.3%.
In corporate news, shares in Fuji Heavy Industries added 0.6%
after a Nikkei report said that the manufacturer of Subaru cars
likely saw operating profit climb 15% on a year-to-year basis to
about Yen80 billion ($786 million) this past quarter.
In Taiwan, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. fell 4.6%
after the world's largest contract chip maker forecast a strong
third quarter after reporting record second-quarter earnings. The
stock fell after the results came out as investors took profit on a
stock that has performed strongly this year, and still remains 18%
up year-to-date.
More must-reads from MarketWatch:
9 reasons Apple's stock will keep rising: Jeff Reeves
What Fox's Time Warner bid means for you
Obama: New Russia sanctions significant and targeted
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires