By V. Phani Kumar
Asian shares declined Tuesday after a plunge in the U.S. spooked
investors, although some markets pared the extent of early losses
in late trading.
Japanese stocks fell for a third straight session, led by a
steep decline in Nomura Holdings Inc. after the brokerage announced
a share-sale plan a day earlier. This outweighed modest gains in
exporters as the yen extended its recent weak spell against major
currencies.
Japan's Nikkei 225, which tumbled more than 3% at one point
during the session, ended down 1.5% at 7,268.56.
"The Western stock markets appear to be in a much worse
condition than the Asia-Pacific region," said Andrew To, sales
director at Taifook Securities in Hong Kong. "There should be some
switch of funds from European and U.S. markets back to some
emerging markets."
Stocks in Australia, India, Singapore and Taiwan narrowed their
initial losses, with U.S. stock futures pointing higher.
Australia's S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.6% to 3,331.60 and Taiwan's
Taiex ended down 1.1%, while in afternoon trading, India's Sensex
slipped 0.5% and Singapore's Straits Times gave up 1.4%.
"My gut-feel is that a lot of people are punting on a bit of a
bounce," said Ric Klusman, senior institutional trader at Aequs
Securities. "And our (Australian) market seems to be absolutely
sick of selling. They think there's some good value there."
Shanghai, Hong Kong lose big
Some other markets in the region lost heavily, though, with
China's Shanghai Composite Index dropping by the biggest margin,
4.6%, as investors locked in profits after three days of gains in
one of the world's best performing markets of 2009.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dropped 2.9%, with China-related
stocks tracking movements in Shanghai. South Korea's Kospi slumped
3.2%.
"We are now seeing some of the concerns (about the economy)
turning into reality and we know there are unsolved issues...that
could delay a recovery for the global economy further. At this
moment, risk aversion is very high across the global stock
markets," said So Jang-ho at Samsung Securities in South Korea.
Taifook's To said anticipation that the Hong Kong government
could announce personal tax concessions and stimulus measures for
the property sector in an annual budget on Wednesday kept the
market from falling further.
Still, some others expressed concern about deteriorating
conditions in Hong Kong ahead of economic data also expected
Wednesday.
"Investment data isn't going to look good either with private
businesses reining in spending on machinery and equipment. I
wouldn't be surprised to see a double-digit contraction in
investment," said DBS economist Connie Tse.
Gross domestic product for the three months ended Dec. 31 is
expected to have contracted 1.5% from the same period a year
earlier, according to the median estimate of 12 economists surveyed
by Dow Jones Newswires.
Property shares fell less than the broad market in Hong Kong on
hopes of a government stimulus, with Cheung Kong (Holdings) down
2.1% and Henderson Land Development Co. falling 1.4%.
Shares of market heavyweight HSBC Holdings (HBC) dropped 3% on
persistent worries it may announce a large share sale as well as
large write-downs related to bad investments when it reports its
earnings next week.
Regional detail
In Tokyo, shares of Nomura Holdings (NMR) plunged 9.3% after the
brokerage Monday said it will issue 716.4 million shares in the
domestic and overseas markets, on concerns the issue, which is
estimated to help Nomura raise as much as $3.5 billion, could
dilute its equity capital by as much as 39%.
Exporters gained modestly, however, as the U.S. dollar rose
above the 95 yen level, with Honda Motor Co. (HMC) up 2.6% and
Nintendo Co. (NTDOY) surging 6%.
In Sydney, gold miners advanced on a strong outlook for the
precious metal's prices, with Lihir Gold (LIHRY) rising 1.2% and
Newcrest Mining (NCMGY) gaining 0.9%. Shares of Oil Search (OISHY)
jumped 3.3% after it said profit more than doubled in 2008.
Technology shares were broadly weaker after the overnight tumble
on Wall Street, with Samsung Electronics (SSNLF) dropping 3.6% and
Hynix Semiconductor (HXSCF) losing 2.7% in Seoul, while Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM) declined 2.2% in Taipei.
Thailand's SET Index fell 1.2%, Indonesia's main index gave up
1.4% and Malaysia's KLSE Composite was little changed, while
Philippines' PSE Composite dropped 1.1%.
"The real issue is nobody [in Thailand] wants to buy at the
moment and we're stuck in a dull trading range with no catalyst to
push it either way," said Andrew Yates, a senior vice president at
Royal Bank of Scotland.
"Even if you want to commit, there is liquidity in only a
handful of stocks, and where there is value in the second-liners
there is no liquidity in them," he said.
New Zealand's NZX-50 Index broke below the 2,500 mark, ending
down 2.1% at 2483.74, its lowest level since March 2004.
In currency trading, the dollar recently bought 95.40 yen, up
from 94.50 yen late in New York, while the euro was higher at
$1.2749 versus $1.2714, and 121.77 yen compared with 120.16
yen.
February gold futures were holding below the $1,000-a-troy-ounce
mark passed Friday, down $8.20 at $986.40, with Sydney-based Sino
Gold Mining Ltd.'s Chief Executive Jake Klein saying in an
interview Tuesday that the gold price could rally to $1,500 an
ounce as the global financial crisis boosts demand, even as output
from producing countries like Australia and South Africa falls.
"Right at the moment, you would have to say that is on the
cards," Klein said.