Asian Shares Off to Lackluster Start
October 27 2015 - 10:10PM
Dow Jones News
Markets in Asia were off to a weak start Wednesday, after oil
prices slid to two-month lows and as investors stayed cautious
before the Federal Reserve concludes a two-day policy meeting.
Japan's Nikkei Stock Average was up 0.7%. South Korea's Kospi
was off 0.1%
Australia's S&P ASX 200 was down 0.4%, as banks start to
report earnings. Energy shares on the benchmark were off 0.7%, with
Santos Ltd. down 3.4% and Woodside Petroleum Ltd. 3.6% lower.
Shares in the region have been lackluster this week, before the
Fed concludes its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday. Although the
central bank is widely expected to leave benchmark interest rates
unchanged near zero, investors will parse the Fed's post-meeting
statement for clues about the path of its monetary policy.
Investors are also watching Japan's central bank for more easing
after its policy meeting Friday.
"The questions that lingers is whether further central bank
interventions in the next two weeks will have the same effect as
what was seen after the right things were said by the [European
Central Bank]," said Evan Lucas, market analyst with brokerage
IG.
Comments from the ECB last week about possible easing in
December sparked a rally across global equities, just before
China's central bank cut interest rates late on Friday.
"The positive effects are becoming smaller," as questions emerge
about whether easing has run its course amid slowing growth in
emerging markets, he added.
The MSCI Asia Pacific closed Tuesday just off its highest level
since mid-August. The benchmark, up 9.7% month-to-date, is on track
for its largest monthly percentage gain since April 2009.
Overnight, U.S. stocks mostly fell as oil prices slumped and
investors await the outcome of the Fed's meeting.
The Japanese yen was last at ¥ 120.51, roughly flat compared
with its close in Asia on Tuesday. The currency traded as strong as
Â¥ 120.14 against the dollar a day earlier, after news that a U.S.
Navy ship sailed near artificial islands in the South China Sea
claimed by China sent investors toward haven assets.
In Australia, shares of National Bank of Australia Ltd. were
down 1.4%, after the firm unveiled a deal to sell control of its
life-insurance business and plans to exit its U.K. business early
next year. The firm also said its full year net profit rose 20% to
6.34 billion Australian dollars ($4.56 billion).
Shares of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. jumped 4.1% in New York,
after the e-commerce giant reported a net profit for its fiscal
second quarter ended Sept. 30 of $3.57 billion, more than seven
times what it reported a year earlier, thanks largely to a one-off
gain of $2.93 billion from the revaluation of a stake in Alibaba
Health Information Technology.
The company also sounded a positive note about the Chinese
economy. Alibaba Executive Vice Chairman Joe Tsai said wage growth
and considerable savings would empower consumers even as the
world's No. 2 economy slows to its lowest rate of growth since
2009.
Brent crude oil was up 0.5% at $47.03 a barrel. U.S. oil prices
fell 2.3% overnight, on expectations that U.S. crude stockpiles
grew for the fifth straight week last week.
Gold was flat at $1,166.70 a troy ounce.
Gillian Wong and Robb M. Stewart contributed to this
article.
Write to Chao Deng at Chao.Deng@wsj.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 27, 2015 21:55 ET (01:55 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Santos (ASX:STO)
Historical Stock Chart
From Jan 2025 to Feb 2025
Santos (ASX:STO)
Historical Stock Chart
From Feb 2024 to Feb 2025