Asian Markets Trade Lower On Weak Wall Street Lead
Asian
stock markets are trading lower on Monday with investors indulging in
fairly heavy selling in several front line stocks, tracking cues from Wall Street where stocks tumbled Friday amid some disappointing earnings reports.
In
the Australian market, mining, energy and healthcare are among the
prominent losers. Financial, industrial and property trusts stocks are
also mostly trading weak.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index, which declined to 4,522.7 in early trades, is currently down 30.7 points or 0.7 percent at 4,540.4. The broader All Ordinaries index is down 29.8 points or 0.6 percent at 4,563.7, nearly 20 points off the day's low of 4,545.9.
Among bank stocks, National Australia Bank is down nearly a percent and Westpac is trading 1.2 percent down, while ANZ Bank and Commonwealth Bank of Australia are down marginally. Bendigo & Adelaide Bank is down 0.6 percent and Bank of Queensland is trading flat.
Top miners BHP Billiton (BHP, BBL) and Rio Tinto (RIO, RIO.L) are down 1 percent and 2.2 percent, respectively.
In the energy sector, Woodside Petroleum, Santos, Oil Search and Caltex Australia are trading lower by 0.6 to 1.2 percent, while Origin Energy is bucking the trend and trading marginally up.
Treasury
Wine Estates shares are down more than 6 percent following the company
lowering its financial forecasts after a slow first-quarter performance.
The company said its earnings in the first half of the 2012-13
financial year would be 20 percent lower, compared to its earnings in
the same period last year.
Whitehaven Coal, Fortescue Metals,
Iluka Resources, Aurora Oil & Gas, Oz Minerals, James Hardie
Industries, SP Ausnet and Primary Healthcare are down 2 to 2.6 percent.
QBE Insurance Group, Bluescope Steel, ResMed , PanAust, News Corporation (NWS), Challenger and WorleyParsons are also trading sharply lower.
Meanwhile,
Fairfax Media is up 3.5 percent and Perseus Mining is trading higher by
around 2 percent, while Graincorp is up with a hefty gain of 40
percent.
Graincorp has announced
that it is reviewing an A$2.7 billion takeover offer from U.S.-based
agribusinesses Archer Daniel Midlands (ADM). Graincorp confirmed it had
received an indicative, non-binding acquisition proposal from ADM, after
the U.S. company last week increased its stake in the Australian
business to 14.9 percent.
The
Japanese stock market opened sharply lower on Monday with investors
pressing heavy sales almost across the board, following a significant
drop in the country's exports. A weak lead from Wall Street and worries on the earnings front too contributed to the negative start.
However,
with investors indulging in some bargain hunting at lower levels, the
market regained some lost ground towards the end of the morning session.
Steel,
non-ferrous metals, precision instruments, manufacturing,
pharmaceuticals and financial stocks mostly traded weak. Shares from
railway, services and electric power sections traded mixed.
The benchmark Nikkei 225
index, which declined to around 8,868 in early trades, was down 73.1
points or 0.8 percent at 8,929.5 at the end of the morning session.
Amada Co., Nippon Electric Glass, Citizen Holdings and Mazda Motor lost 3 to 4 percent. Mitsubishi Corp. shares lost around 3 percent on a downward revision in earnings forecast due to falling commodities prices.
Kobe Steel, Mitsubishi Paper
Mills, Furukawa, Ebara Corp., Sumco Corp., Tokyo Electric Power,
Pacific Metals, Toho Zinc and Sumitomo Metal Mining lost over 2 percent.
JFE
Holdings Inc. shares declined on reports of a likely fall in the
company's pretax profit for the April to September half-year period.
Japan Tobacco Inc., Tokyo Electron, Mitsubishi Chemicals, Mitsui Chemicals, Canon Inc., Japan Steel Works, Pioneer Corp. and Nissan Motor also posted Sharp losses.
Among the gainers in the Nikkei index, Sharp Corp. moved up by over 10 percent, Keisei Electric Railway added 4.4 percent and Unitika, Sumitomo Osaka Cement and Hitachi Zosen Corp. gained 2 to 3 percent.
Tokyo Tatemono, Mitsubishi Motors, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Holdings Inc., Sumitomo Chemical, Chugai Pharmaceutical, NTT Data and Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma also moved higher.
In economic news, Japan saw a merchandise trade deficit of 558.55 billion yen in
September, the Ministry of Finance said on Monday. That missed
forecasts for a shortfall of 547.9 billion following the downwardly
revised deficit of 755.9 billion yen in August.
Exports
plummeted 10.3 percent on year - also missing expectations for a
decline of 9.9 percent following the 5.8 percent contraction in the
previous month. Imports were up an annual 4.1 percent versus forecasts
for a gain of 2.9 percent after dipping 5.4 percent a month earlier.
In the currency market, the U.S. dollar traded in the lower 79 yen range in early deals in Tokyo. The yen is currently trading at 79.30 to the dollar.
Among
other markets in the Asia-Pacific region, Shanghai, South Korea and
Taiwan are trading notably lower. Indonesia, Malaysia, snd Singapore are
down with modest losses, while Hong Kong is bucking the trend and
trading marginally up. The New Zealand market is closed for a holiday.
Markets across the region had turned in a mixed performance on Friday.
On
Wall Street, stocks declined sharply on Friday, as traders reacted
negatively to the latest batch of earnings news, particularly from
Microsoft , General Electric and McDonald's .
The major averages regained some ground in the final hour of trading but still ended the day firmly in negative territory. The Dow tumbled 205.4 points or 1.5 percent to 13,343.5, the Nasdaq plummeted 67.3 points or 2.2 percent to 3,005.6 and the S&P 500 plunged 24.1 points or 1.7 percent to 1,433.2.
Major European markets too moved to the downside on Friday. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 index dipped by 0.4 percent, while the German DAX index and the French CAC 40 Index lost 0.8 percent and 0.9 percent, respectively.
U.S. Crude oil ended sharply lower on Friday, tracking declining equity markets and a strengthening dollar after
some disappointing U.S. existing home sales data, soft earnings, and
disappointment over the outcome of the European Union summit meet.
Crude for November delivery plunged $2.05 or 2.2 percent to close at $90.05 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
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