China market volatile after holiday

Mainland China’s stock markets reopened after a four-day weekend . Photo: Getty Images

Beijing, China (BBN) – Asian markets were mixed on Wednesday, taking the lead from Wall Street’s narrowly mixed close in the last session.

Investors in the region digested mixed trade data out of China and kept an eye on President Donald Trump’s tour of Asia, reports CNBC.com.

MARKETS ON THE MOVE
Japan’s Nikkei 225 lost 0.27 percent a day after the benchmark index hit a 26-year high.

Across the Korean Strait, the Kospi turned positive, climbing 0.11 percent after trading flat earlier in the day. Gains in blue chip names offset losses in financials and automakers: Samsung Electronics rose 0.75 percent, SK Hynix gained 1.46 percent and Hyundai Motor was off 0.32 percent.

Down Under, the S&P/ASX 200 edged up 0.09 percent. Mining stocks pared gains made in the last session. The heavily-weighted financials sub-index held in the green to trade higher by 0.72 percent.
Commonwealth Bank announced unaudited net profit for the three months ending September climbed to 2.8 billion Australian dollars ($2.14 billion). Cash earnings for the quarter rose 6 percent to A$2.65 billion ($2.03 billion). Commonwealth shares rose 2.86 percent, outperforming other banking stocks, which notched moderate gains.
Greater China markets erased early losses to record modest gains. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index was rose 0.3 percent. On the mainland, the Shanghai Composite added 0.54 percent and the Shenzhen Composite tacked on 0.685 percent.
October trade data released Wednesday showed China’s exports rose 6.9 percent from one year ago, compared to the 7.2 percent forecast in a Reuters poll. Imports rose 17.2 percent, ahead of the 16 percent forecast. China’s surplus with the U.S., meanwhile, declined to $26.2 billion from $28.08 billion last month, Reuters added.
“Markets seem unsure which way to go next … [given how] all the key releases were last week,” Rob Carnell, Asia head of research at ING, said in a note.
U.S. markets closed mixed on Tuesday as investors digested news that Disney had been in discussions with 21st Century Fox over a deal, although it wasn’t certain any agreements would result from that.
The Dow Jones industrial average edged up 0.04 percent, or 8.81 points, to close at 23,557.23. Other major indexes finished below the flat line.
THE LEAD UP
President Donald Trump addressed the Korean National Assembly on Wednesday as his five-country tour of Asia rolled on. The president warned that the U.S. should not be underestimated and added that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was putting his regime in “grave danger” by continuing to acquire weapons.
Trump is expected to arrive in China later in the day.
Tax reform was in the spotlight stateside, with Senate Republicans slated to unveil their tax bill. However, it remained unclear what the exact date of the release would be. The draft House tax bill was released last week.
The dollar was little changed on Wednesday. The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six currencies, stood at 94.833 at 12:25 p.m. HK/SIN, against Tuesday’s close of 94.848. Against the yen, the U.S. currency edged down to trade at 113.76.
CORPORATE NEWS
Toyota raised its full-year operating profit estimate to 2 trillion yen on Tuesday. That was an 8 percent increase compared to its previous forecast of 1.85 trillion yen. Toyota shares tacked on 0.67 percent as other automakers trended lower on the day.
Meanwhile, Tencent’s China Literature made its debut in Hong Kong on Wednesday. Shares of the online e-book platform were up more than 70 percent at the open compared to its issue price of 55 Hong Kong dollars ($7.05) apiece at the open. Tencent shares were up 1.07 percent.
THE COMMODITIES TRADE
Oil prices extended losses on Wednesday after sliding in the last session. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude shed 0.38 percent to trade at $56.98. Brent crude futures lost 0.24 percent to trade at $63.54.
Oil had settled 3 percent higher on Monday following a supposed anti-corruption purge in Saudi Arabia and the surprise resignation of former Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri over the weekend.
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