Market Updates

Asia Surges, HK, Shanghai Soar

Ivaylo
22 Jan, 2001
New York City

    Asian markets closed higher Monday, with HK and Shanghai both reaching record closing highs, while the Japanese benchmark index hit its highest close in nine months. In Japan, stocks rose as shares on real-estate developers and steelmakers. In Hong Kong, HSBC and China Mobile pushed the Hang Seng Index to close at a record high. In China, transportation and retail companies surged on expectations of strong revenue in the run-up to the Chinese New Year. South Korea and Australia also advanced.

[R]7:30 AM Asian markets advance Monday with HK, Shanghai and Japan leading.[/R]
Asian markets finished higher on Monday. Japanese Nikkei Index ended 0.7% higher at 17,424. Mitsubishi Estate gained 2.4% and Mitsui Fudosan ended 2% higher. Nippon Steel advanced 2.5% and JFE Holdings added 3.7%. Among bank stocks, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group was 2.6% higher, Mizuho Financial Group closed 2.1% higher and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group advanced 1.6%.

The Hong Kong Hang Seng Index soared 2.2% to 20,772. HSBC gained 1.7% and was the most heavily traded stock, while China Mobile finished 4.3% higher on its report last Friday that it had its strongest-ever monthly subscriber additions in December. The Shanghai Composite Index surged 3.6% to 2,933. The top biggest gainers included, bus and taxi operator Beijing Bashi which surged 10%, the daily limit, and Daqin Railway which also rose 10%, while Shanghai Airlines gained 9.9%. Among retailers, Chengdu People Department Store, Beijing Wangfujing Department Store and Yinchuan Xinhua Department Store all closed 10% higher.

South Korean Kospi Index advanced 0.2% to 1,363. Shares gained on large-caps including Hynix and LG Electronics. Hynix Semiconductor advanced 2.2% on a technical rebound after a loss of 4.9% Friday. LG Electronics gained 1.7%. Australian S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.9% to close at 5,727. Strength in commodity prices powered broad-based gains in the stock market, with resources leading the charge. BHP Billiton was the biggest points contributor to the index, advancing 2.1%. Woodside Petroleum rose 2.5%.

[R]6:30 AM European shares gain Monday with auto, oil and resource stocks higher.[/R]
European markets were higher on Monday. By late morning, FTSE 100 in London climbed 0.5% to 6,266.9, Frankfurt Xetra Dax added 0.2 % to 6,758.26, and the CAC 40 in Paris gained 0.4 % to 5,639.17.

Advancers

Swatch, the world largest watchmaker, reported a 12.3% rise in 2006 sales, adding that it expected full-year operating profit to above average

Austrian bank Raiffeisen International gained 2.8% after Morgan Stanley raised its price target, saying it had underestimated the bank asset growth potential.

DaimlerChrysler led the auto sector higher after JPMorgan raised its price target keeping its overweight rating.

German car parts maker Continental gained 2.1% after Merrill Lynch lifted its target price in expectation of capital restructuring in the coming months.

Philips shares rose 1.6% in Amsterdam after the company said its fourth quarter net profit more than doubled on comparable sales growth of 2%.

Credit Suisse rose 0.4% after it said that it intends to return up to 8 billion Swiss francs to its shareholders over three years.

Oil stocks were higher too. Norway Statoil gained 1.7%, while Austrian OMV added 1.6% and Royal Dutch Shell climbed 0.8%.

Decliners

British Airways were trading down 1.7% after it said it was notified by the Transport and General Workers Union that British Airways employees who are members of the TGWU cabin crew branch will be called upon to take part in a series of strikes.

Oil and gold

Crude oil advanced for a second day in New York on speculation that cold weather in the northeastern U.S. will increase consumption. Crude oil for February delivery rose $1.06, or 2%, to $53.05 a barrel, in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude for March settlement gained 69 cents, or 1.3%, to $54.13 a barrel in electronic trading on the ICE Futures exchange and was at $53.97 in London. Gold traded in London at $635.10 per troy ounce, up from $632.00 late Friday.

Currencies

The dollar rose against other major currencies in European trading Monday morning. The euro traded at $1.2949, down from $1.2965 late Friday. The British pound traded at $1.9730, down from $1.9737. The dollar bought 121.60 Japanese yen, up from 121.29.

[R]5:00 AM Gold and silver advance on Friday supported by stronger crude oil.[/R]
February gold gained $8.30 to close at $636.40 a troy ounce and March silver advanced 23.5 cents to finish at $12.92 an ounce. April platinum settled flat at $1,168.50 an ounce, while March palladium closed the session up $1.50 at $344.90. The most-active March copper contract added 2.50 cents to finish at $2.5170 per pound on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

February crude oil reached $52.05 a barrel before ending up $1.51 at $51.99 a barrel. February heating oil also gained 4.28 cents to end at $1.5135 a gallon. February gasoline settled up 4.27 cents at $1.3980 a gallon and February natural gas advanced 56.2 cents to finish at $6.886 a million British thermal units.

On the New York Board of Trade, the March Arabica coffee futures contract settled down 0.05 cent at $1.1970 a pound. March futures on raw sugar in foreign ports gained 0.15 cent to close at 10.86 cents a pound.

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