Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Asia markets struggle as profit-taking offsets Wall St. rally


A man walks by an electronic stock board of a securities firm in Tokyo, Monday, March 2, 2015. Asian equities were mostly lower Tuesday after healthy gains in the previous session attracted profit-takers, offsetting a strong lead from Wall Street. AP PHOTO/KOJI SASAHARA

A man walks by an electronic stock board of a securities firm in Tokyo, Monday, March 2, 2015. Asian equities were mostly lower Tuesday after healthy gains in the previous session attracted profit-takers, offsetting a strong lead from Wall Street. AP PHOTO/KOJI SASAHARA



HONG KONG–Asian equities were mostly lower Tuesday after healthy gains in the previous session attracted profit-takers, offsetting a strong lead from Wall Street.


Shanghai tumbled 2.20 percent, or 73.24 points, to 3,263.05 after rallying Monday in response to the Chinese central bank’s weekend interest rate cut. Hong Kong shed 0.74 percent, or 184.66 points, to end at 24,702.78


Tokyo closed flat, slipping 0.06 percent, or 11.72 points, to 18,815.16.


Sydney–which ended Monday at a seven-year high–fell 0.42 percent, or 24.98 points, to 5,933.90 after the Australian central bank kept interest rates on hold, confounding expectations for a cut to another record low.


However, Seoul finished 0.23 percent, or 4.57 points, higher at 2,001.38.


US shares added to their six-year bull run Monday, with the Dow and S&P 500 again ending at record highs, while the Nasdaq surged above 5,000 for the first time since 2000, when the dot-com bubble burst.


The tech-rich Nasdaq jumped 0.90 percent, the Dow rose 0.86 percent and the S&P advanced 0.61 percent.


The gains came on a stream of merger announcements, including the $16.7 billion acquisition of Freescale Semiconductor by NXP Semiconductor, in a deal that links two Nasdaq companies.


On currency markets the dollar fetched 119.76 yen, down from 120.17 yen in New York, while the euro rose to $1.1194 from $1.1182.


Aussie dollar picks up


The greenback was also at 6.2748 yuan, against 6.2850 in US trade, levels not seen since October 2012 and well up from 6.2668 on Friday before the rate cut.


In Sydney investors reversed early gains after the Reserve bank of Australia held rates at record lows.


“The market was expecting another cut and because that didn’t come through, and given that the RBA didn’t deliver, you’re getting a selloff,” Nader Naeimi, Sydney-based head of dynamic asset allocation at AMP Capital Investors, told Bloomberg News.


“The market has run really hard, so needs a period of consolidation and this is providing the trigger.”


The Australian dollar, which has suffered heavy selling against its US counterpart in recent months, climbed to 78.28 US cents from 77.69 US cents.


Traders are watching the start Thursday of the annual meeting of China’s rubber-stamp legislature, the National People’s Congress, at which Premier Li Keqiang is expected to deliver an address on the state of the economy.


Oil prices recovered slightly after sliding in the previous session. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate rose 55 cents to $50.14 while Brent crude gained 99 cents to $60.53.


Gold fetched $1,207.80 against $1,216.55 late Monday.


In other markets:


— Wellington was flat, edging up 0.99 points to 5,893.67.


Contact Energy rose 0.33 percent to NZ$6.11 and market heavyweight Fletcher Building was unchanged at NZ$8.63.


— Taipei was marginally higher, putting on 4.41 points to 9.605.77.


Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. rose 1.01 percent to Tw$150.5 while smartphone maker HTC fell 3.02 percentto Tw$144.5.


— Manila was marginally higher, ticking up 2.59 points to 7,776.51.


Philippine Long Distance Telephone fell 0.13 percent to 3,096 pesos while GT Capital Holdings rose 3.87 percent to 1,260 pesos.


— Singapore closed up 0.54 percent, or 18.22 points, to 3,422.11.


Oil rig maker Keppel Corp. rose 0.91 percent to Sg$8.84 while DBS Bank declined 0.10 percent to Sg$19.26.


— Jakarta edged down 3.21 points to 5,474.62.


Auto maker Astra International gained 1.59 percent to 8,000 rupiah, while cigarette maker Gudang Garam fell 0.05 percent to 55,000 rupiah.


— Kuala Lumpur gained 0.23 percent, or 4.12 points, to 1,821.25.


Malayan Banking rose 1.63 percent to 9.35 ringgit, AMMB Holdings went up 0.94 percent to 6.43 while Sime Darby dropped 0.64 percent to 9.32 ringgit.


— Mumbai rose 0.46 percent, or 134.59 points, to end at 29,593.73 points.


Reliance Industries rose 4.39 percent to 901.65 rupees, while Coal India fell 3.89 percent to 379.35 rupees.


— Bangkok slid 1.22 percent, or 19.30 points, to 1,562.84.


Bank of Ayudhya fell 7.88 percent to 55.50 baht, while oil company PTT Exploration and Production dropped 3.06 percent to 111 baht.



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