Hong Kong's stock market rebounded after a one-day hiatus. Signs of stabilization in the property sector and gains in technology stocks boosted positive sentiment. As of 9:55 a.m. local time, the Hang Seng Index rose 1.3% to 27,191.99, and Hang Seng Tech rose 2.2%. Tech stocks led the way: Kuaishou surged 8%, Baidu and Alibaba both rose 3.7%, JD.com rose 2.5%, Tencent added 2.1%, Meituan 1.8%, and Xiaomi 1.9% after reporting deliveries of over 40,000 cars in September. Meanwhile, Trip.com fell 1.9%, Pop Mart 1.5%, Li Auto 0.7%, and Anta Sports 1.2%. Mainland Chinese markets were closed...
Hong Kong stocks were mostly flat on Monday morning, trading around 19,868 after rallying in the previous session, as investors digested China's November CPI and PPI data. Mainland consumer prices rose 0.2% year-on-year, missing market consensus of 0.5% and marking the weakest gain in five months. Producer prices, meanwhile, fell 2.5%, marking a 26-month decline, although easing from a 2.9% drop in October. Source: Trading Economics
China's producer prices fell 2.5% year-on-year in November 2024, after falling 2.9% in the previous month and below market expectations of 2.8%. This marked the 26th straight month of producer deflation, reflecting continued weakness in domestic demand amid Beijing's ongoing efforts to stem the trend. On a monthly basis, producer prices edged up 0.1%, after falling 0.1% in October. For the first 11 months of the year, producer prices shrank 2.1%. Source: Trading Economics
The Nikkei 225 and Topix indexes showed limited movement on Monday, as global political instability weighed on financial markets. Ongoing political crises in South Korea and France, along with the collapse of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime, contributed to the uncertainty. Domestically, Japan's third-quarter economic growth was revised upward, indicating the country's second consecutive quarter of expansion. Investors are now awaiting business sentiment data later in the week to further assess the health of the economy. Notable declines were seen in index heavyweights such as...
Asian stocks started the week on a weak note, as investors grappled with South Korea's political upheaval and awaited fresh stimulus from Beijing. Oil prices steadied after Syria's government was toppled. Korean equity benchmarks fell as much as 1.8% at the open, with Australian shares also down. Japanese shares were flat. Futures pointed to a weak open in Hong Kong. The dollar and 10-year Treasury yields were steady. Investors are bracing themselves this week for a series of central bank decisions on four continents, a key meeting of Chinese officials and U.S. inflation data in a bid to...
he Nasdaq and the S&P 500 rose to record closing highs on Friday following upbeat forecasts from Lululemon Athletica and other companies and as U.S. jobs data fueled expectations the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates this month. The Dow finished lower, as a drop in UnitedHealth Group (UNH.N), shares weighed on the index. The S&P 500 consumer discretionary index (.SPLRCD), led gains among sectors, boosted by Lululemon. Shares of Lululemon Athletica (LULU.O), jumped after the sportswear maker increased full-year forecasts. Also in the consumer discretionary space, shares of...