Tokyo shares up for 12th day as Shanghai, Hong Kong rebound | Inquirer Business

Tokyo shares up for 12th day as Shanghai, Hong Kong rebound

/ 12:04 AM June 02, 2015

A woman walks by an electronic stock board of a securities firm in Tokyo on Monday, June 1, 2015. Weak Chinese manufacturing data boosted stock markets in Shanghai and Hong Kong on Monday as investors speculated on the rising likelihood of new stimulus measures. Other Asian benchmarks fell as unease over waning US growth and delays in reaching an agreement on Greece's bailout terms spilled into the new week.  AP PHOTO/KOJI SASAHARA

A woman walks by an electronic stock board of a securities firm in Tokyo on Monday, June 1, 2015. Weak Chinese manufacturing data boosted stock markets in Shanghai and Hong Kong on Monday as investors speculated on the rising likelihood of new stimulus measures. Other Asian benchmarks fell as unease over waning US growth and delays in reaching an agreement on Greece’s bailout terms spilled into the new week. AP PHOTO/KOJI SASAHARA

HONG KONG–Tokyo stocks chalked up a 12th straight gain Monday, their best run in more than a quarter of a century, while Shanghai and Hong Kong rebounded as data indicated a pick-up in Chinese manufacturing.

The euro edged down as Greece’s bailout reform talks plod on without agreement in sight despite this week’s deadline to repay some debts–fueling fears of a default that could see it leave the eurozone.

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Tokyo recovered from initial losses to end marginally higher, adding 6.72 points, at 20,569.87. The 12 days of gains marked the best rally since 1988 at the height of Japan’s stock market bubble.

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Shanghai, which plunged almost 7 percent over Thursday and Friday, jumped 4.71 percent, or 216.99 points, to end at 4,828.74. Hong Kong added 0.63 percent, or 172.97 points, to 27,597.16.

But Sydney dropped 0.72 percent, or 41.8 points, to close at 5,735.4 and Seoul fell 0.59 percent, or 12.43 points, to 2,102.37.

Singapore, Wellington and Bangkok were closed for public holidays.

In Tokyo the Nikkei reversed initial losses caused by profit-taking as investors bet on the Bank of Japan announcing more monetary easing, while the yen sits around 12-year lows against the dollar.

On Monday the dollar was at 124.20 yen in Tokyo against 124.12 yen late Friday in New York. The greenback briefly touched 124.46 last Thursday, the highest level since December 2002.

“Today’s (stocks) gain suggests that the market is seeing Japan’s corporate performance as favorable,” said Kenzaburo Suwa, strategist at Okasan Securities in Tokyo.

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Japanese dealers brushed off Wall Street losses Friday after data showed the world’s biggest economy shrank 0.7 percent in the first three months of the year as the country was hit by severely cold weather.

Euro ticks lower

The Dow lost 0.64 percent, the S&P 500 shed 0.63 percent and the Nasdaq dropped 0.55 percent.

In China the official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) of manufacturing activity came in at 50.2 for May, the strongest since November and the third consecutive month of expansion.

The reading, which is above the 50 point mark that separates growth from contraction, also showed demand increasing.

Chinese investors returned to buying Monday after the Shanghai index plunged almost 7 percent over Thursday and Friday in response to a tightening of rules for margin trading.

The market has surged about 120 percent over the past year on hopes Beijing will unveil a series of easing measures to boost the economy.

“The stock market has consolidated and is likely to grow at a slower pace rather than just straight up,” said Wang Zheng, the Shanghai-based chief investment officer at Jingxi Investment Management Co.

“The stabilization of the economy indicated by the PMI data has also helped sentiment.”

The euro slipped to $1.0906 and 135.42 yen from $1.0991 and 136.42 yen.

Dealers are keeping tabs on the long-running talks between Greece and its creditors as they struggle to find an agreement on overhauling its bailout terms.

However, there are worries Athens will not achieve a deal that will unlock the billions of euros it needs for a debt repayment on June 5.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on Sunday attacked creditors for insisting on what he described as absurd reforms that had only delayed progress in negotiations for a deal.

On oil markets US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for July fell 67 cents to $59.63 a barrel, while Brent shed 71 cents to $64.85.

Gold fetched $1,185.80 compared with $1,190.33 late Friday.

In other markets:

— Taipei declined 0.78 percent, or 75.38 points, to 9,625.69.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. closed 0.68 percent lower at Tw$145.0 while Hon Hai Precision Industry shed 1.82 percent to Tw$97.3.

— Manila ended 1.19 percent, or 89.91 points, higher at 7,670.37.

— Jakarta ended down 0.05 percent, or 2.56 points, at 5,213.82.

Miner Aneka Tambang gained 1.97 percent to 775 rupiah, while Indonesian cigarette manufacturer Gudang Garam fell 0.21 percent to 47,000 rupiah.

— Kuala Lumpur ended down 0.24 percent, 4.11 points, at 1,743.41.

British American Tobacco fell 1.77 percent to 60.90 ringgit, Genting Malaysia lost 0.24 percent to 4.24 ringgit while Public Bank added 0.22 percent to 18.54 ringgit.

— Mumbai rose marginally by 0.07 percent, or 20.55 points, to end at 27,848.99.

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Engineering major Larsen Toubro rose 3.03 percent to 1,705.50 rupees, while Sun Pharmaceutical Industries fell 8.99 percent to 878.95 rupees.

TAGS: Asia, currencies, Finance, gold price, oil prices, stocks

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