Canberra, Aug. 12, (dpa-AFX/GNA) - Asian stocks ended mixed on Friday, with Japanese markets posting strong gains in a catch-up rally following a holiday.
A cautious undertone prevailed after comments from Federal Reserve officials pointed to aggressive interest rate hikes to bring inflation down to the Fed’s 2% target.
US producer prices for July slowed at a faster pace than expected, reinforcing investors’ views that inflation is peaking out.
San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank president Mary Daly warned on Thursday it is far too early for the US central bank to “declare victory” in its fight against inflation.
Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said he believes the Fed has plenty more work to do. Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said he is sticking to his view that the US central bank will need to raise its policy rate another 1.5 percentage points this year and more in 2023, even if that causes a recession.
Chinese stocks fell as several Covid-hit cities imposed fresh restrictions and lockdowns after a rise in cases. Yiwu, a major commodity and manufacturing hub in the Zhejiang Province, asked all its residents to stay home for three days – starting early Thursday morning – to contain flare-ups.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite index slid 0.15% to 3,276.89 while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index closed 0.46% higher at 20,175.62.
Japanese shares ended at a seven-month high amid signs that U.S. inflation may be slowing. The Nikkei average jumped 2.62% to 28,546.98, marking its highest close since January 12. The broader Topix index closed 2.04% higher at 1,973.18.
Tech stocks such as Advantest, Screen Holdings and Tokyo Electron climbed 4-5%. Heavyweight SoftBank Group surged 5.6% after the technology investor said it would book a $34.1 billion gain by cutting its stake in Alibaba Group Holding.
Automaker Honda Motor rallied 3.8% after raising the outlook for its full-year operating profit.
Seoul stocks ended a choppy session slightly higher. The Kospi average edged up 0.16% to 2,527.94. Posco’s trading arm, Posco International, soared 9.3% on news that it is absorbing Posco Energy to accelerate the shift to the green energy business.
Market behemoth Samsung Electronics rose half a% after its Vice Chairman and de facto head Lee Jae Yong received a presidential pardon over a bribery case.
Australian markets declined, with miners and tech stocks leading losses. Higher oil prices lifted energy stocks, with Woodside Energy rallying 3.7%. Coal explorer Stanmore Resources jumped 10.9% on news its unit would buy Mitsui & Co’s remaining 20% stake in BHP Mitsui Coal.
The benchmark S&P ASX 200 dropped 0.54% to 7,032.50 but posted its fourth straight weekly gain. The broader All Ordinaries index ended half a% lower at 7,288.80.
New Zealand shares ended slightly lower as a strong kiwi dollar weighed on exporters. The benchmark S&P NZX-50 index dipped 0.25% to close at 11,730.52.
Ahead of next week’s monetary policy meeting, a survey showed that manufacturing activity in the country expanded in July.
US stocks gave up early gains to end mostly lower overnight, as recession worries persisted and top Fed officials signalled they expect interest rate hikes to continue into 2023.
The latest economic data painted a mixed picture, with jobless claims rising for a second straight week while the July producer price index showed a surprise decline from June.
The Dow finished marginally higher while the S&P 500 ended little changed with a negative bias and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite shed 0.6%.
GNA