Asian shares mostly higher in thin holiday trade

Business & Finance
23 Jan 2023 • 6:34 PM MYT
The Sun Daily
The Sun Daily

For the latest news and features from Malaysia and the rest of the world.

image is not available

SYDNEY: Asian stocks ended mostly higher in thin trade Monday, with markets in mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Seoul closed for Lunar New Year celebrations, reported dpa-AFX.

Chinese markets will not resume trading until January 30.

Japanese shares rallied as the yen retreated from last week’s 7.5-month high and minutes of the Bank of Japan’s December policy meeting showed that board members wanted to modify their yield control curve in order to improve market functionality.

The Nikkei average jumped 1.33 per cent to 26,906.04, with chip-related stocks leading gains. The broader Topix index ended 0.96 per cent higher at 1,945.38.

Australian markets finished marginally higher as miners snapped a two-day winning streak, offsetting gains in the tech sector.

The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index closed up 5.10 points at 7,457.30, extending gains for the fourth day running and hitting its highest level since April 22 last year.

The broader All Ordinaries index finished higher by 7.9 points at 7,674.20. Tech heavyweight Block Inc surged 6.1 per cent.

Across the Tasman, New Zealand shares ended slightly lower as the Labour Party caucus selected Chris Hipkins to succeed Jacinda Ardern as the country’s next prime minister. Hipkins has stated he would switch focus from Covid-19 to bolstering the economy as recession looms after a series of sharp interest rate hikes.

The benchmark S&P/NZX-50 index settled 0.24 per cent lower at 11,948.72 ahead of the latest inflation figures due in the middle of the week. Serko soared 8.7 per cent after the business travel software maker upgraded its revenue guidance for the FY23 year.

Indian shares were off their day’s highs, with the Sensex trading up 0.4 per cent at 60,864.

Oil and gold prices were slightly lower in Asian trading as the dollar struggled to recover ahead of more corporate earnings and economic data due this week.

US stocks rose sharply on Friday, as streaming giant Netflix reported stronger than expected subscriber growth, Google parent Alphabet revealed a plan to cut 12,000 jobs globally and Fed officials Patrick Harker and Christopher Waller said they favour a 25-basis-point rate hike at the next meeting.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite jumped 2.7 per cent and the S&P 500 added 1.9 per cent to mark its first gain in four days while the Dow gained 1 per cent.

European stocks closed modestly higher on Friday amid optimism about Chinese economic growth and signs of cooling inflation. - Bernama