The Hang Seng Index fell 1.1% at 25,388.35 in Hong Kong. The move was the biggest since falling 2% on June 19 and follows the previous session's increase of 0.5%. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. contributed the most to the index decline, decreasing 1.9%. Kuaishou Technology had the largest drop, falling 4.9%. Today, 63 of 85 shares fell, while 20 rose; all sectors were lower, led by commerce and industry stocks. Source : Bloomberg
European markets fell sharply on Tuesday, with the Stoxx 50 and Stoxx 600 dropping over 2%, marking the biggest decline since August. Investors are concerned about how US President-elect Donald Trump's return to office might impact Europe's economy. Most sectors were in the red, with mining stocks leading the losses, down by 4% due to lower metal prices like gold and copper. Technology stocks were the only sector to see slight gains. Investors are also focusing on economic data, with the ZEW Indicator of Economic Sentiment for Germany declining more than expected. Also, German inflation...
A rally that drove stocks to a series of all-time highs ran out of steam, with Wall Street traders awaiting key inflation data and more clues on Donald Trump's transition to presidency. Equities fell after the S&P 500's biggest five-day run in a year. Following sizable post-election gains, small caps and banks lost ground. Nvidia Corp. led megacaps higher, while Tesla Inc. dropped 3% after soaring 44% in five days. Bitcoin fell after a sizzling advance that took the digital asset close to $90,000....
The Hang Seng Index fell for the third day, dropping 2.8%, or 580.05 to 19,846.88 in Hong Kong. The move was the biggest since falling 3.7% on Oct. 15. Meituan contributed the most to the index decline, decreasing 5.3%. Zhongsheng Group Holdings Ltd. had the largest drop, falling 9.6%. Today, 76 of 82 shares fell, while 6 rose; all sectors were lower, led by commerce and industry stocks. Source : Bloomberg
The Nikkei 225 index rose 0.5% to above 39,700 while the broader Topix index gained 0.9% to 2,765 on Tuesday, extending gains from the previous session and taking cues from a strong lead on Wall Street as a post-election rally sent major U.S. indexes to all-time highs. The rally was fueled by optimism surrounding a Trump victory and a possible Republican landslide in Congress, raising expectations for deregulation and tax cuts. In Japan, investors were focused on the Bank of Japan's monetary policy outlook after the latest minutes of its opinion revealed a split among policymakers over the...
The Japanese yen held steady around 153.5 per dollar on Tuesday after falling in the previous session, weighed down by a stronger dollar amid expectations that strong U.S. economic growth and aggressive trade policies under Trump will push inflation higher. At home, minutes from the Bank of Japan's October policy meeting revealed a split among policymakers over the timing of future interest rate hikes. Several members expressed concerns about global economic uncertainty and rising market volatility, particularly the ongoing yen depreciation. However, the central bank maintained its forecast...