By V. Phani Kumar, MarketWatch
HONG KONG (MarketWatch) -- Japanese and Australian stocks rose
Tuesday after upbeat manufacturing reports from the U.S. and the
euro zone, while Hong Kong shares retreated on weakened activity at
Chinese factories.
Australia's S&P/ASX 200 rose 1.5%, while Japan's Nikkei
Stock Average climbed 1.1%, and Taiwan's Taiex inched up 0.1%.
Their gains came as stocks on Wall Street ended higher after the
Institute for Supply Management reported an increase in its
manufacturing index, and the euro-zone's Purchasing Managers' Index
(PMI) for June climbed to a 16-month high.
"These are good signs for the world's two largest-consuming
regions. The fact Europe looks like normalizing and could emerge
from what is a record-long recession for the region will be a
massive benefit the global economy," said IG Markets strategist
Evan Lucas.
The U.S. and euro-zone manufacturing reports follow the Bank of
Japan's quarterly tankan survey Monday, showing a sharp improvement
in confidence at large Japanese businesses, although two separate
PMI surveys on China maintained their downtrend.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell 0.4%, and South
Korea's Kospi slipped 0.1%, while the Shanghai Composite gave up
0.5%.
Banks and property developers declined in Hong Kong after the
China PMI releases, with China Construction Bank Corp. (CICHY)
losing 3.1%, and China Overseas Land & Investment Ltd. (CAOVY)
sliding 2.2%.
PMI data from Taiwan and South Korea also indicated a further
deterioration in their respective manufacturing sectors on
Monday.
"The June PMIs for emerging Asia suggest the region's
manufacturing sectors continue to struggle. ... We think fragile
global demand will make life difficult for Asia's manufacturers, at
least until the end of the year," said Kyrstal Tan, Asia economist
at Capital Economics.
An overnight increase in prices of gold, copper and crude-oil
aided shares of commodity producers around the region.
Gold miner Newscrest Mining Ltd. (NCMGY) jumped 6.3%, and energy
producer Santos Ltd. (SSLTY) gained 4.1% in Sydney, while Sumitomo
Metal Mining Co. (5713.TO) soared 6% in Tokyo.
In Hong Kong, shares of Cnooc Ltd. (CEO) rose 0.9%, while
PetroChina Co. (PTR) leapt 6.4%, getting an extra lift from news
that China's economic planning agency has raised the government-set
wholesale prices of natural gas by about 15%.
Australian banks rose after Monday's losses. The Reserve Bank of
Australia was expected to leave rates unchanged at its meeting
Tuesday.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBAUY) added 0.9% and Australia
& New Zealand Banking Group (ANZBY) gained 0.7%.
Several Japanese exporters were also spurred as the U.S. dollar
(USDJPY) stuck close to the 100-yen level amid expectations the
greenback may soon return above the psychologically important
level.
"Based on the direction of monetary policy, we feel that [the
dollar's rate against the yen] should revisit its highs," said BK
Asset Management managing director Kathy Lien.
"If U.S. [Treasury] yields continue to rise, Japanese companies
will start to reduce their hedges as the cost to maintain these
positions rise, which is another factor that could drive [the
dollar] back to its 2013 high" against the yen, she said.
Shares of Hitachi Ltd. (HTHIY) rose 4.1%, Canon Inc. (CAJ) added
2.8%, and Subaru-maker Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd. (FUJHY) rose
1.6%.
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