By V. Phani Kumar
Asian markets ended mixed Tuesday as export-related shares and
financials broadly advanced but property developers lost ground on
a weak outlook for prices.
Australian shares ended higher for the fifth time in six
sessions after the government announced a fiscal stimulus plan and
the central bank cut a key interest rate by a full percentage
point.
Japanese stocks took a roller-coaster ride before being grounded
by declines in lenders such as Shinsei Bank and Mitsubishi UFJ
Financial Group.
Chinese shares in Shanghai extended gains on hopes the
government may unveil more policies to support a weakening
economy.
But in Hong Kong, property stocks declined a day after the Hong
Kong Monetary Authority said the number of residential-mortgage
loans in negative equity nearly quadrupled in the last quarter of
2008 as property prices dropped. Sun Hung Kai lost 4.9% and Cheung
Kong (Holdings) shrank 6.1%.
"Maybe on the mainland people are still expecting the government
to introduce more policies, but I don't think that's helping Hong
Kong markets much," said Linus Yip, strategist at First Shanghai
Securities.
China's Shanghai Composite, where trading resumed Monday after a
long Chinese New Year holiday, extended gains to finish 2.4% up at
2,060.81.
The performance lifted the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index,
also known as the H shares index, 0.7% in Hong Kong. But the
benchmark Hang Seng Index closed 0.7% lower at 12,776.89.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 Average closed 0.6% down at 7,825.51.
The benchmark flirted with gains a few times and rose as much as
2.7% after the Bank of Japan announced it planned to buy stocks
worth up to 1 trillion yen ($11.1 billion) through April 2010 from
Japanese banks to help improve the lenders' balance sheets.
Mitsubishi UFJ (MTU) shares fell 0.8% and Shinsei (SKLKF) stock
lost 7.4% after Japanese media reported they would slash earnings
forecasts. Shinsei after the market closed said it predicts a group
net loss for the fiscal year ending in March.
Shipping stocks rose sharply, however, after another rise for
the Baltic Dry Index, with Nippon Yusen (NYUKF) rising 5.2% and
Mitsui O.S.K. Lines (MSLOF) finishing 4.9% higher.
In Sydney, the S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.3% to 3,508.70, although
it gave up some of its early gains after the Reserve Bank of
Australia cut its official cash rate target by 100 basis points to
3.25%, as expected. But the market remained supported by the
government's plan for an additional A$41.5 billion (US$26 billion)
in fiscal stimulus.
"What the government is doing is providing some fairly good
support, but it may not be enough to completely offset the damage
that's going to be done to businesses and exports from the very
sharp downturn in the global economy," said ANZ Bank senior
economist Katie Dean.
Shares of Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA.AU) jumped 9.8%
after the lender forecast its half-yearly profit was likely to be
16% lower than it was in the year-earlier period but 20% higher
than consensus analyst estimates.
The prediction lifted other financials, with National Australia
Bank (NABZY) gaining 4.5% and Westpac Banking Corp. (WBK) jumping
7.1%.
Banks also advanced in Hong Kong, Mumbai and Seoul, recovering
some of their losses from the previous session. Bank of China
(601988.SH) gained 1% in Hong Kong, Icici Bank (IBN) climbed 3.6%
in Mumbai afternoon trading and Industrial Bank of Korea (IBOKF)
rose 3.6%.
In afternoon trading, India's Sensitive Index rose 2.4% to
9,284.02, with DLF extending losses to tumble 12.5% by
mid-afternoon after reporting a sharp decline in earnings last
week.
Vinod Sharma, director and head of research at Anagram
Securities in Ahmedabad, said investor confidence was low in the
wake of poor corporate-earnings growth and as foreign investors
continued to sell down their holdings.
"Currently, people are looking for opportunities where, if the
market goes up they would like to lighten their commitments," he
said. "Long-term players are staying away and I don't see serious
people entering the market."
Investors mostly looked past the mixed performance on Wall
Street on Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) fell 0.8%
and the broader S&P 500 (SPX) was down 0.1%, though the
Nasdaq's (RIXF) 1.2% gain boded well for technology stocks.
In Seoul, Samsung Electronics (SSNLF) was up 3.5% and Hynix
Semiconductor Inc. (HXSCF) rose 2.4% on hopes of a recovery in chip
prices. In Taipei, Hon Hai Precision (HNHAY) gained 2.2% and AU
Optronics Corp. (AUO) jumped 5.4%.
South Korea's Kospi ended up 1.4% at 1,163.20 and Taiwan's Taiex
gained 2.7% to 4,372.81. Malaysian shares fell 0.7% and Indonesian
stocks declined 0.5%, while Thailand's main index added 0.5% by
late afternoon. Singapore's Straits Times Index added 0.6% to
1,715.70.
In foreign-exchange markets, the U.S. dollar was buying 89.56
yen versus 89.60 yen Monday afternoon in New York and the euro
fetched 115.09 yen, compared with 115.13 yen. Against the dollar,
the euro was trading at $1.2856 compared with $1.2847.
The Australian dollar enjoyed a modest bounce after the RBA's
expected rate cut, trading at US$0.6387 compared with US$0.6350
before the decision.
March Nymex crude-oil futures were last up 22 cents at $40.30 a
barrel after falling in New York trade following the resolution of
a refinery labor dispute.
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