Market Updates
Nikkei Declined 11%
123jump.com Staff
28 Dec, 2007
New York City
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Stocks in Japan struggled today as they have done for the year. Nikkei fell 0.6% to 15,546.69 and for the year is down 11%. Credit market worries, slumping U.S. and Japanese economic growth, and virtual halt in construction industry has crimped economic vitality. Consumer price index in November rose at one of the fastet rates in a decade on rising food and energy prices. Japan Airlines stock fell after talks of 150 billion yen offering to raise additional funds.
[R]5:00AM New York, 7:00PM Tokyo- Japan’s core consumers prices increase 0.6% for the year in November. Industrial production plummets 1.6% in November.[/R]
Stocks in Japan closed the year in negative territory on weakening global credit markets and rising inflation as energy costs continue to soar.
In Tokyo Nikkei 225 Index closed lower 256.91 or 1.65% to 15,307.78,, and is down 11% for the year, while the broader Topix Index declined 1.6% or 24.26 to 1,475.68, a 12% plunge for the year.
In the first section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange 8.8 billion shares valued at 1.0 trillion yen were traded and in the second section 308 million shares valued at 5.3 billion yen changed hands.
Of the Nikkei 225 stocks 14 gained, 203 declined, and 8 were unchanged. Takeda Pharmaceutical Company led gainers with a rise of 3.03% followed by Nippon Oil Corp gaining 2.02%.
The Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communication’s Statistics Bureau reported today that Japan’s consumer price index fell 0.2% in November, but soared 0.6% for the year in November to 100.7.
Food prices index fell 1.1% for the month and increased 0.9% for the year to 100.6, housing price index was unchanged for the month and the year and stood at 99.8, while fuel, light and water charges gained 0.9% in November and rose 2.2% from a year ago to 105.8.
Consumer prices for the Ku-area of Tokyo however rose 0.2% in December and 0.4% from a year ago. Food prices increased 0.6% from November and 0.7% from a year ago. Housing prices were unchanged in November but increased 0.2% from a year ago to 100.2.
Fuel, light and water charges increased 0.2% for the month and gained 1.6% from a year ago.
Japan’s Ministry of Industry Trade and Economy said today that the number of employed increased 0.4% from a year ago in November to 64.33 million and the number of unemployed fell 5% from a year ago to 2.46 million.
METI statistics noted that labor force in the month stood at 66.79 million and people not in labor force were at 43.65 million.
Average monthly consumption for a household of two or more in November fell 0.6% to 282,836 yen, while average monthly income per household slid 1.5% in nominal terms and 2.1% in real terms from previous year to 435,640 yen.
In addition, expenditures declined 0.9% in nominal and 1.5% in real terms to 302,879 yen from a year ago.
METI reported that industrial production fell 1.6% from previous month and increased 2.9% for the year in November to a seasonally adjusted 110.4. Production is expected to rise 4.0% in December and to remain unchanged in January.
Inventories increased for the eleventh successive month by 2.5%.
Minister of Economy and Fiscal Policy Hiroko Ota said in Tokyo today inflation induced by high energy “may choke off spending by consumers and companies”.
Of the Nikkei 225 index stocks Takeda Pharmaceutical Company led gainers with a rise of 3.03% followed by gains in Nippon Oil Corp of 2.02%, in Mazda Motor Corporation of 1.64%, in Daiwa Securities of 1.40%, and in Kubota Corporation of 0.66%.
Japan Airlines led decliners in the Nikkei 225 stocks with a fall of 5.56% followed by losses of 4.57% in Chiyoda Corp, 4.43% in Meiji Seika, 3.80% in Mitsumi Electric Company, and 3.77% in Credit Saison Company.
Japan Airlines stock fell sharply on Nikkei reports it may sell its preferred shares to raise 150 billion yen. The carrier is reportedly seeking agreements with Mitsubishi Corp, Mitsui & Company and four other lenders by the end of March.
Financial stocks fell after Goldman Sachs said Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase, Merrill Lynch may write-down an additional $34 billion in subprime linked investments in the current quarter. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group fell 3.15%, Mizuho Financial Group slipped 2.91%, and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group declined 2.77%.
Exporters fell after U.S. orders for durable goods rose by a less-than-expected 0.1% in November. Canon edged down 2.62%, Toyota Motor Corporation fell 1.95%, and Sony tumbled 2.21%.
Bloomberg news reported today Mitsubishi Motor Corporation signed an agreement with the Russian government granting it incentives including reduced custom duties on imported auto parts to assemble vehicles in the country. Mitsubishi Motor Corp closed down 1.05%.
[R]5:00AM New York, 9:00PM Sydney - The Australia index lost 0.2% after loses in resource stocks.[/R]
ASX 200 index lost 0.2% or 11 to close at 6,339.90.
The Preliminary market turnover was 355.4 million shares worth $1.105 billion with 348 stocks closed higher, 503 traded lower, and 292 were unchanged. Flinders Diamonds was the most actively traded stock with 37.9 million shares worth $3.68 million changing hands.
Rams Home Loans Group Ltd today extended a $500 million loan and the maturity of two of its funding facilities from December 31 to May 2.
The company also disclosed that it had also extended a separate $250 million facility to January 31 from December 31 as it failed to refinance more than $6 billion ($5.3 billion) in short-term loans this year.
Rams also indicated that it has received initial approvals to refinance $4.25 billion in short-term loans, including $1.5 billion with Westpac and $2.75 billion with lenders that were not identified.
Australia''s fourth-largest bank, Westpac Banking Corp bought the Rams brand and branch network for $140 million last month and agreed to provide $1.5 billion in funding after the company failed to refinance short-term loans when subprime- linked losses escalated in August and investors shunned risky credits.
Centro Properties Group today indicated that two of its units, Centro Direct Property Fund and Centro Direct Property Fund International will pay reduced dividends for the fourth quarter.
Centro Direct Property Fund is worth $2.4 billion ($2.1 billion) and Centro Direct Property Fund International has a net worth of $1.9 billion. The parent Centro Group lost nearly 80% of its market cap in one week.
Centro and its Retail Group announced on December 17 that it was suspending dividends after experiencing difficulties in meeting the February 15 deadline to refinance its $3.9 billion debt.
Centro shares declined 5.9% while Centro Retail was down 1%.
The Board of IMX Resources today signed a detailed Heads of Agreement with Jilin Tonghua Iron & Steel Mining Company Ltd for the purchase of Cairn Hill magnetite /copper ore in South Australia and a 16.4 million share placement at 85 cents per share to raise $13.93 million ($12.3 million) representing a 9.9% stake.
According to a statement issued by IMX Resources NL''s Managing Director Duncan Mcbain the terms of the agreement, Tonghua Mining will purchase 100% of the production of Cairn Hill ore from the initial project at approximately 1.2 million to 1.4 million tons per year, for a 3-year period.
Tonghua Mining plans to construct a processing facility in China to process the Cairn Hill ore to produce a high-grade magnetite concentrate and a copper/gold concentrate. Tonghua Mining also has the first right of acceptance for any additional production over the 1.4 million tons per year.
At the cessation of the contract, IMX Resources will have the first right to purchase the processing facility at market price. IMX rose 12% after the news.
The Australian dollar closed stronger again today after reaching 0.8792, the highest since December 14, before settling at 0.8730 at the close.
Of the ASX 200 index shares, Fortescue Metals led the gainers with a rise of 17.6% followed by increases in Australand Properties of 4.8%, in Challenger Finance of 3.7%, in Valad Property of 3.3%, and in Santos Limited of 2.9%.
Of the ASX 200 index stocks Centro Properties led the decliners with a fall of 5.9% followed by losses in APN/UKA European of 4.9%, in Sundance Resource of 4.5%, in Mincor Resources of 4.5% in, and in Bunnings Warehouse of 4.3%.
Stocks in energy sector were higher, with Woodside adding 1%, Santos up 2.9%, and Oil Search gaining 0.4%.
The gold miners were up with Newcrest adding 2% and Lihir advancing 1.2%.
The banking sector was mixed, with ANZ gaining 0.4%, Commonwealth Bank of Australia up 1.6%, the National Australia Bank was lost 0.7% and Westpac shed 0.1%.
The retailers were mixed, with David Jones adding 0.4%, Wesfarmers adding 1.1%, and Harvey Norman shed 0.7%.
The media sector was also mixed, with Fairfax was down 1.3%, News Corp lost 1.1%, Consolidated Media Holdings declined 3.9%, and Crown shed 1.5%.
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