Asian Stocks Broadly Higher Ahead Of Easter Break
Asian stocks ended mostly higher on Thursday following reassuring
comments from the Federal Reserve chief. Gains, however, were modest on
growing concerns about military activity in Ukraine and amid caution
ahead of a long weekend.
Tokyo
stocks swung between gains and losses before closing on a flat note.
The benchmark Nikkei average edged down 0.15 points to finish at 14,418
after rallying 3 percent the previous day. The broader Topix Index,
meanwhile, edged up 0.04 points to close at 1,167. Insurance and metal
stocks paced the declines, while shipping and warehouse shares saw fresh
buying. Camera maker Canon Inc. rose 1.3 percent on a Nikkei report
that its operating profit jumped 50 percent last quarter.
Sumitomo
Chemical Co. ended flat on a separate report that it more than doubled
its group pretax profit for the year ended March. Sony Corp lost 0.8
percent. The company said it sold more than 7 million PlayStation 4
videogame consoles since its launch last year. Heavyweight Fast
Retailing dropped 1.5 percent and Bridgestone lost a percent on profit
taking after sharp gains on Wednesday.
In
economic news, confidence among Japan households declined to the lowest
since August 2011, the results of a monthly survey from the Cabinet
Office showed. The consumer sentiment index dropped to 37.5 in March
from 38.5 in February. Separately, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko
Kuroda said today that the central bank will maintain its quantitative
and qualitative easing until necessary to achieve its 2 percent price
target in a stable manner.
Chinese
shares lost ground, dragged down by property developers as investors
awaited home price data due on Friday for direction. Sentiment was also
dampened after Premier Li Keqiang once again ruled out major stimulus to
counter slowing growth. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index fell 0.3
percent to 2,099. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose 0.3 percent to
finish at 22,760 in thin trading ahead of the Easter holiday.
Australian
shares followed Wall Street higher, although gains remained modest
ahead of the long Easter and Anzac holiday period. The benchmark
S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.6 percent to 5,454. The big banks rose between
0.5 percent and 1 percent. Miners ended mixed, with BHP Billiton edging
up 0.3 percent, while Rio Tinto eased 0.2 percent and Fortescue Metals
Group dropped 1.1 percent. Gold and nickel miner Regis Resources slid
0.8 percent after reporting a decline in production for the March
quarter.
Woodside Petroleum
gained a percent. The oil & gas producer reported a 5 percent rise
in production in the March quarter, matching expectations. Santos, which
missed analyst estimates for first-quarter sales and production, fell
0.2 percent while Oil Search eased 0.1 percent. Retailer Woolworths
climbed 2.1 percent to finish at a record closing high on heavy volume
and rival Wesfarmers added 0.6 percent.
In
economic releases, sales of new motor vehicles in Australia fell a
seasonally adjusted 0.3 percent in March from the previous month,
declining for the third straight month, the Australian Bureau of
Statistics said.
Seoul
shares moved in a tight range before closing marginally lower due to
selling by institutional investors. The benchmark Kospi average slipped
0.01 percent to 1,992. Offshore investors remained net buyers and
purchased shares worth a net 168.5 billion won, while institutions sold
shares worth 161.3 billion won, preliminary data showed. The South
Korean won fell against the U.S. dollar.
On
the economic front, South Korea's producer prices declined for the 18th
straight month in March as lower oil and vegetable prices offset higher
prices of livestock products and private services, the Bank of Korea
said.
New Zealand shares
rose as a successful listing by partially privatized Genesis Energy
sparked a rally in other energy stocks. The benchmark NZX-50 Index rose
0.3 percent to 5,103. Genesis shares jumped 17 percent on debut in heavy
trading, while Meridian Energy advanced 1.7 percent, Mighty River Power
added 1.1 percent, Contact Energy gained 1.5 percent and TrustPower
closed up 1.2 percent.
Tech
shares also gained ground, with Xero rallying 3.4 percent after recent
declines, while Diligent Board Member Services soared 6.7 percent and
Pacific Edge gained 1.7 percent.
Elsewhere,
India's Sensex was rallying 1.5 percent, with IT stocks pacing the
gainers after Tata Consultancy Services and HCL Technologies reported
better-than-expected quarterly results. Indonesia's Jakarta Composite
Index was moving up 0.4 percent, Malaysia's KLSE Composite was gaining
0.1 percent and the Taiwan Weighted average rose 0.2 percent, while
Singapore's Straits Times Index was down 0.1 percent.
Singapore's
non-oil domestic exports fell 6.6 percent from a year earlier in March,
reversing the 8.9 percent increase in February, official data showed.
Malaysia's inflation rate held steady at 3.5 percent in March from a
year ago, a government report showed, coming in line with economists'
expectations.
U.S. stocks
extended gains for a third session on Wednesday as investors digested
dovish remarks from Fed Chair Janet Yellen and the latest Beige Book
report showing "modest or moderate" improvement in most regions of the
country. Positive earnings results and solid industrial production
figures helped investors shrug off a disappointing report on housing
starts. The Dow gained a percent, the tech-heavy Nasdaq advanced 1.3
percent and the S&P 500 added 1.1 percent.
Speaking
to the Economic Club of New York, Yellen reiterated that the central
bank will remain highly accommodative until employment and inflation
reach healthier levels. "The larger the shortfall of employment or
inflation from their respective objectives, and the slower the projected
progress toward those objectives, the longer the current target range
for the federal funds rate is likely to be maintained," she said.
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