
The Hang Seng fell 87 points, or 0.3%, to finish at 26,346 on Tuesday, reversing three consecutive sessions of gains as U.S. futures pointed to a lower open on Wall Street following Monday's rally. Mainland stocks also eased after six straight sessions of strength, retreating from a decade high ahead of official October PMI data and amid growing doubts over the durability of the recent easing in U.S.-China trade tensions. Hong Kong's consumer and tech sectors weighed on the index, with steep losses from Zijin Gold Intl. (-4.5%), Anta Sports (-4.2%), China Hongqiao Group (-3.7%), and Xiaomi...
The Nikkei 225 closed nearly flat on Wednesday (October 22nd), hovering around 49,308 (-0.02%), after a rally to its previous record triggered profit-taking—particularly in technology stocks—leading to volatile movement throughout the session. This "flat" closing tone aligns with the weakening technology sector in Asia following Wall Street's sluggish performance. On the sentiment side, the market weighed news that new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is preparing a large stimulus package—a factor that temporarily curbed intraday declines—as well as data showing Japanese exports rose 4.2%...
The Hang Seng Index fell 0.7% to 25,842.83 as of 10:00 a.m. local time, following a pause in Wall Street's rally as the S&P 500 stalled and the Nasdaq slipped 0.2%. Pressure came from tech stocks: NetEase slumped 3.3% to HK$232.40, Alibaba fell 2.3% to HK$161.30, and Baidu retreated 2% to HK$115. Precious metals stocks also took a hit—Zijin Mining fell 5.6% to HK$30.58 and jewelry retailer Chow Tai Fook fell 4.3% to HK$15.91—as gold held below US$4,100/oz after a sharp correction and silver weakened 7.9% to US$48.54. Index losses were limited by Pop Mart International's 4.5% surge to...
Asian stock markets fell on Wednesday, as investors digested Japanese trade data and the formation of a new government in Tokyo. Japanese exports rose 4.2% year-on-year in September—breaking a four-month decline—but still below expectations of 4.6%. The rise in Asia helped offset weakening shipments to the US.The cabinet of new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi was officially sworn in. Shinjiro Koizumi was appointed defense minister, while Satsuki Katayama became Japan's first female finance minister. Market sentiment remains cautious amid this political transition.In Japan, the Nikkei 225 fell...
Japan's Nikkei Stock Average is down 0.7% at 48988.23, dragged by chip and metals stocks, as profit-taking kicks in following their recent surge. SoftBank Group is down 8.3%, Advantest is 2.8% lower while Sumitomo Metal Mining is down 5.3% and JX Advanced Metals is 4.5% lower. Meanwhile, auto stocks are higher thanks to a weaker yen and hopes for lower taxes on gas in Japan. Toyota Motor is up 4.2% and Honda Motor is 3.6% higher. The broader market index Topix is up 0.2% at 3255.47. USD/JPY is at 151.63, compared with 151.57 as of Tuesday's Tokyo stock market close. Investors are focusing...
US stocks closed higher for the third straight session as a strong start to earnings overcame lingering US-China trade uncertainty. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 240 points to a record high, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index closed slightly higher as a string of results that beat expectations boosted gains. General Motors jumped 16% after raising its forecast, Coca-Cola gained 3.8% on steady beverage demand and benefits from an Indian bottling deal, and 3M rose 6.3% after beating estimates. Defense and aerospace stocks outperformed, with GE Aerospace rising 1.3% and...