Oman Daily Observer

Asian markets sink, weak yen extends Tokyo rally

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HONG KONG: Asian stock markets mostly fell on Tuesday on profit-taking following a week-long rally but Tokyo headed for a sixth straight gain as a weak yen boosted exporters.

The rally in Japan’s export sector was enough to offset a more than 10 per cent plunge in mobile giant Softbank, which was hammered after agreeing a $32 billion deal to buy a British chip designer.

Hopes for fresh global central bank stimulus, coupled with forecast-beating readings on US jobs and retail sales, have injected some much-needed optimism after last month’s shock British vote to leave the European Union.

The upbeat outlook has also fed a surge on Wall Street that has seen the Dow and S&P 500 rack up multiple record closes.

While Asian investors cashed in Tuesday, Chris Weston, chief market strategist at IG Ltd in Melbourne, predicted further gains to come.

“On current sentiment, it seems likely that any pullbacks will be shallow and a buying opportunit­y,” he said, according to Bloomberg News. “We will need to see good earnings, or the market is at risk of rolling over.”

Hong Kong, which had climbed the previous six days, slipped 0.6 per cent, while Shanghai ended down 0.2 per cent. Sydney dipped 0.1 per cent and Seoul was off 0.2 per cent. Singapore shed 0.6 per cent.

However, Tokyo — which was closed on Monday for a holiday — added 1.4 per cent as exporters were lifted by the soft yen.

The Japanese unit has retreated against the dollar in recent weeks on expectatio­ns the country will introduce new stimulus and other easing measures. In addition, positive US data have fanned expectatio­ns of a Federal Reserve interest rate rise this year.

The dollar was at 106.03 yen on Tuesday afternoon, down from 106.14 yen but well up from the levels around 100 yen seen before the jobs report earlier this month. The exporters’ rally was enough to offset the collapse in market heavyweigh­t SoftBank, which closed 10.3 per cent lower.

Investors were unimpresse­d by the deal to buy Britain’s ARM Holdings, which makes chips for Apple’s iPhone. SoftBank paid a more than 40 per cent premium per share for ARM, which caused renewed worries about its balance sheet following a string of other high-value purchases.

Nintendo soared 14 per cent to take its market capitalisa­tion higher than Sony. Its shares have doubled since July 6, when the wildly popular Pokemon Go smartphone game was released.

The Pokemon Go phenomenon was also boosting other firms. McDonald’s Japan jumped more than five per cent after it started giving away figurines from the game with sales of Happy Meals on Friday.

In early European trade London and Paris each dropped 0.3 per cent and Frankfurt slipped 0.2 per cent.

Key figures: Tokyo - Nikkei 225: UP 1.4 per cent at 16,723.31 (close); Hong Kong - Hang Seng: DOWN 0.6 per cent at 21,673.20 (close); Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 0.2 at 3,036.60 (close); London - FTSE 100: DOWN 0.3 per cent at 6,678.25; Dollar/yen: DOWN at 106.03 yen from 106.14 yen; Pound/ dollar: DOWN at $1.3241 from $1.3257; Euro/dollar: DOWN at $1.1067 from $1.1075; New York - DOW: UP 0.1 per cent at 18,533.05 (close).

 ?? — AFP ?? A pedestrian looks at the stock price indicator flashing the closing rate in Tokyo.
— AFP A pedestrian looks at the stock price indicator flashing the closing rate in Tokyo.
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