Asia markets close higher on 2018's first trading day
·
Asian indexes closed
mostly firmer as markets shrugged off the softer lead from Wall Street
·
The Hang Seng Index
touched a 10-year high during the session
·
The dollar index traded
near three-month lows
·
Oil prices added to
gains after U.S. crude settled above $60 for the first time since mid-2015 in
the prior session
·
China Caixin
manufacturing PMI topped expectations
Asian indexes closed mostly higher in the first trading session
of the New Year as markets shrugged off the softer lead from Wall Street.
Greater China markets shone, with Hong Kong's benchmark index climbing to its
highest levels in more than 10 years in the session while the dollar struggled
near its lowest levels in three months.
In
Sydney, the S&P/ASX 200 slipped below the flat line to close
lower by 0.06 percent at 6,061.3. Gains in the telecommunications and resources
sectors were offset by declines in the health care and heavily weighted
financials sub-indexes, which closed lower by 0.56 percent and 0.23 percent,
respectively.
Gold
producer stocks rose 1.19 percent as the yellow metal traded at three-month
highs. Kingsgate rose 5 percent and Newcrest added 1.14 percent by the end of
the day.
Elsewhere,
South Korean markets carved out slight gains following geopolitical
developments regarding North Korea in the past week. The benchmark Kospi index
tacked on 0.49 percent to close at 2,479.65 as technology stocks mostly gained
while automakers fell. Heavyweights Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix inched
higher by 0.12 percent and 0.13 percent, respectively, while Hyundai Motor
declined 4.17 percent on the day.
Symbol
|
Name
|
Price
|
|
Change
|
%Change
|
NIKKEI
|
NIKKEI
|
22764.94
|
|
-19.04
|
-0.08%
|
HSI
|
HSI
|
30472.88
|
|
553.73
|
1.85%
|
ASX 200
|
S&P/ASX
200
|
6061.30
|
|
-3.80
|
-0.06%
|
SHANGHAI
|
Shanghai
|
3349.05
|
|
41.88
|
1.27%
|
KOSPI
|
KOSPI
Index
|
2479.65
|
|
12.16
|
0.49%
|
CNBC 100
|
CNBC
100 ASIA IDX
|
8698.35
|
|
49.98
|
0.58%
|
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had declared
his country a nuclear power during his New Year's Day address on
Monday, but also acknowledged that he was "open to dialogue" with the
South, Reuters reported. Last week, South Korea seized a second vessels suspected of violating sanctions by
smuggling oil to North Korea.
The positive sentiment also seen in greater
China markets. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index soared 1.81 percent, earlier touching its highest levels
since 2007. Technology, banking and property shares led the index higher. Apple
suppliers Sunny Optical and AAC Technologies rose 9.21 percent and 6.96 percent
by 3:15 p.m. HK/SIN.
Among real estate plays, Sunac rose 11.44
percent, Country Garden advanced 8.05 percent and China Ever Grande Group added
4.64 percent at 3:15 p.m. HK/SIN.
The move higher on Tuesday followed news last week
that Chinese regulators would start a program that lets Hong Kong-listed,
mainland-incorporated firms turn non-tradable equity into tradeable shares,
Reuters said. The Hang Seng had outperformed other
major Asian markets in 2017, rising 36 percent in the past year alone.
Mainland markets also saw increases following
the release of better-than-expected economic data: The Shanghai Composite rose 1.27 percent to end at 3,349.05 and
the Shenzhen Composite closed up 1.05 percent at 1,919.2. Financials and energy
were among the top-performers on the day.
The Caixin manufacturing PMI, which focuses on activity at smaller businesses, for December
released Tuesday came in at 51.5, topping the 50.6 figure forecast in a Reuter’s
poll. The strong showing, which touched a four-month high, was attributed to
solid output and new orders.
The official manufacturing Purchasing
Managers' Index (PMI) released last week had come in at 51.6 for the month of
December, meeting analyst expectations, Reuters said.
Markets in Japan, New Zealand and Thailand
were closed for holidays.
Equities in the region had run up
significantly last year, with MSCI's broad index of
shares in Asia Pacific excluding Japan finishing the year with gains of more
than 30 percent.
Wall Street closed slightly lower in the last trading session of 2017,
with the Dow Jones industrial average declining 0.48 percent, or 118.29 points,
to close at 24,719.22.
Still, major U.S. indexes recorded substantial
gains for the year. The Dow Jones increased 25.2 percent last year and the
benchmark S&P 500 rose 19.5 percent.
European markets were a similar story, with
most indexes lower on Friday, but notching the largest annual gains since
2013 on average.
In currencies, the greenback was on the back foot against a basket of six currencies,
with the dollar index trading at 92.128 at 2:46 p.m. HK/SIN. The index had
notched its largest annual fall since 2003 on Friday.
Against the yen, the dollar mostly flat at 112.68.
Meanwhile, the Australian dollar extended gains made before the New Year,
with the currency last trading at $0.7834. The Aussie dollar has been supported
by the weaker greenback as well as strong commodity prices.
On the energy front, oil prices added to gains
after the prior session saw U.S. crude close above the $60 barrier for the
first time since the middle of 2015.
Brent crude futures edged up 0.46 percent to trade at $67.18
per barrel. U.S. West Texas
Intermediate rose 0.38
percent to hold above the $60 mark at $60.65.
In other economic news, Singapore's economy
grew 3.1 percent in the fourth quarter compared to the previous year and 2.8
percent compared to the last quarter, advance estimates from the government
showed. Quarterly growth came in a touch below the 2.9 percent median estimate
in a Reuter’s survey.
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