Asian stocks mostly lower, early losses trimmed

Closings for stock markets in Tokyo, Sydney, Seoul and Taipei. AFP

HONG KONG—Asian stock markets mostly fell on Thursday but closed off their earlier lows as traders went bargain-hunting despite huge falls in Europe and on Wall Street.

Gold also eased slightly from its record high after breaching the $1,800 barrier for the first time, but the yen edged toward a fresh high against the dollar as dealers poured into safe haven assets.

Tokyo closed 0.63 percent, or 56.80 points, lower at 8,981.94 while Sydney closed flat, edging down 0.5 points to 4,140.8.

Hong Kong fell 0.95 percent, or 188.53 points, to 19,595.14. The index had lost 2.54 percent on opening.

But Seoul – which had earlier lost about four percent – closed 0.62 percent, or 11.20 points, higher at 1,817.44 while Shanghai was up 1.27 percent, or 32.33 points, at 2,581.51.

Regional markets took a hit on opening after Wall Street slumped – with each of the three main indexes losing more than four percent – and Europe was battered by renewed fears over US and eurozone debt.

European woes were reignited on Wednesday when rumors circulated that France was in danger of seeing its top-notch credit downgraded, following last week’s historic cut to the United States’ rating.

Amplifying the debt woes was a Fitch downgrade of Cyprus and comment that the eurozone nation would need an EU bailout.

And Greece stoked the fire when an official said the term for the exchange of bonds under its new rescue plan might have to stretch out beyond 2020 – longer than had been planned.

Such a move would hit the banks and insurers that had already agreed to an effective haircut on their Greek bonds.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy cut short his holiday to announce new moves to slash France’s massive debt while the downgrade was quickly denied, but it failed to prevent steep sell-offs of up to 6.5 percent across Europe, which was led by banks.

However, in early trade on Thursday, European shares jumped, with London up two percent, Frankfurt 2.86 percent higher and Paris three percent up.

Asian markets have suffered a rollercoaster week, tumbling from Friday to Tuesday on eurozone fears and the US debt downgrade before rebounding Wednesday after the US said it would hold rates at record lows for two years.

The sell-off Thursday morning came as gold surged to a record $1,814.50-$1,815.50 an ounce in early trade, with investors looking for a safe place to park their money. However, it eased slightly to close in Hong Kong at $1,782.50-$1,783.50.

The yen, another safe-haven, moved toward its post-World War II high of 76.25 to the dollar, which it hit in the turbulent week after Japan’s March 11 quake and tsunami disaster.

The dollar bought 76.60 yen, down from 76.83 yen in New York late Wednesday.

Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda reiterated that he remained attentive to financial markets and had an eye on the yen, a week after the government stepped into the forex market to stem the unit’s rise.

“I think one-sided movements (in the forex market) are continuing,” Noda said shortly before the market opened. “I’ll continue to watch the market today with keen awareness.”

Prime Minister Naoto Kan, in a televised legislative committee meeting, echoed Noda’s comment, saying: “We will closely monitor the market and think about ways to deal with it.”

Elsewhere in currency markets, the euro firmed to $1.4261 from $1.4168, while it rose to 109.41 yen from 108.91 yen.

Oil rebounded from earlier lows. New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in September, was up 46 cents to $83.35 per barrel in afternoon trade.

Brent North Sea crude for September advanced 53 cents to $107.21.

In other markets:

— Taipei fell 0.22 percent, or 17.23 points, to 7,719.09.

TSMC rose 0.91 percent to Tw$66.4 while UMC fell 2.7 percent to Tw$10.8.

— Manila closed 0.49 percent, or 20.08 points, higher at 4,311.02.

Rising gold prices sent Lepanto Consolidated Mining 6.3 percent higher to 1.36 pesos and Philex Mining rose 2.8 percent to 27.85 pesos. But SM Investments fell 2.3 percent to 507 pesos and Philippine Long Distance Telephone shed 0.5 percent to 2,260 pesos.

— Wellington closed up 0.78 percent, or 24.88 points, at 3,208.62.

Mainfreight rose 1.6 percent after announcing quarterly net profit was up 109 percent year on year, while Steel & Tube Holdings lifted 2.1 percent to NZ$2.40 after doubling its annual net profit.

— Jakarta rose 0.15 percent, or 5.79 points, to 3,869.37 points.

Telkom rose 3.5 percent to Rp 7,350, coking coal producer Borneo Lumbung jumped 7.3 percent to Rp 1,320, while car maker Astra fell 0.6 percent to Rp 67,400.

— Singapore lost 0.88 percent, or 24.87 points, to 2,796.22.

Singapore Telecom eased 1.02 percent to Sg$2.92 after reporting that its first-quarter net profit fell 3.0 percent. Casino operator Genting Singapore dropped 0.30 percent to Sg$1.68.

— Kuala Lumpur ended down 0.27 percent, or 4.06 points, to close at 1476.46.

Plantation and property development firm Kuala Lumpur Kepong slid 0.6 percent at 20.90 ringgit as Public Bank slipped 0.9 percent at 12.82 while offshore services provider Bumi Armada climbed 0.8 percent to 3.93 ringgit.

— Bangkok rose 0.18 percent, or 1.86 points, to 1,062.07.

Banpu lost 12 baht to 674, while PTT lost 2 baht to 315.

— Mumbai closed down 0.42 percent, or 71.11 points, at 17,059.4 after cautious trading.

Most companies were flat, with banks, infrastructure, metals, IT, auto and property stocks all marginally down.

Tata Power lost 4.31 percent despite posting a growth in profit for the first three months of the current financial year.

Originally postes at 2:53 p.m.

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