A pedestrian watches a share prices board displayed on a window of a securities firm in Tokyo. The Nikkei closed down 205.87 points to 14,532.51 yesterday.

AFP/Tokyo

Most Asian markets were mixed yesterday after Wall Street and European shares stabilised in response to upbeat US data, but traders remained on edge about the global economy and fresh fears over Greece.

The figures from Washington calmed nerves slightly, and helped push oil higher, while the dollar and euro ticked up against the yen in the afternoon.

Tokyo reversed a morning advance to end 1.40% lower, with exporters hit by the stronger yen. The Nikkei fell 205.87 points to 14,532.51, a five-month low.

Seoul sank 0.95%, or 18.17 points, to 1,900.66 and Shanghai closed 0.65% lower, giving up 15.32 points to 2,341.18.

However, Sydney rose 0.32%, or 16.8 points, to 5,271.7 and Hong Kong rose 0.53%, or 122.27 points to 23,023.21.

In other markets, Taipei fell 1.40%, or 120.81 points, to 8,512.88; Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co rose 1.65% to Tw$123.5 while smartphone maker HTC lost 2.27% to Tw$129.0.

Wellington rose 0.29%, or 14.92 points, to 5,146.94; Trade Me was up 1.39% at NZ$3.64 and Spark added 0.17% at NZ$2.885.

Manila ended down 0.36%, or 25.36 points, at 7,033.22; Philippine Long Distance Telephone was up 0.7% at 3,182 pesos while Aboitiz Power fell 3.58% to 39 pesos. Globe Telecom slid 3.49% to 1,602 pesos.

Shares around the world have been hammered in recent weeks by worries about the global economy as the eurozone, China and Japan struggle to reignite growth.

Those fears increased this week when the US, which has been the only economy showing signs of strength, came in well below expectations.

However, there was some relief Thursday when the Department of Labor said initial jobless claims for the week ending October 11 fell to their lowest level since 2000.

Also, the Federal Reserve said industrial production rebounded in September from an unexpected drop in August.

The news helped Wall Street reverse morning losses, although the three main indexes still provided an anaemic lead. The Dow dipped 0.15%, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq were marginally higher. It also helped the dollar and euro pick up against the yen, which is considered a safe bet in times of turmoil, before they retreated towards the end of the day.

In late trade, the dollar bought ¥106.55, compared with ¥106.33 in New York Thursday.

The euro bought $1.2791 and ¥136.30 against $1.2809 and ¥136.19.

The dollar has fallen in value against the yen and the euro since the Fed earlier this month indicated it will likely refrain from hiking interest rates soon owing to worries about overseas economies.

“Any delay in expected monetary normalisation by the Fed will indeed hurt the dollar,” said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst at Commonwealth Foreign Exchange.

“However, the dollar is likely to remain underpinned by the view that America’s economy remains the ‘cleanest shirt in the hamper’.”

The euro held up despite renewed concerns about Greece after the government hinted that it might exit a four-year-old bailout early as it looks to free itself of strict controls attached to the deal.

Analysts have said investors fear Athens will not be able to stand on its own two feet if it goes ahead with the plan, with the country’s main stock market plunging and borrowing costs rising.

The issue has stirred memories of the dark days of the eurozone debt crisis that sent global markets spiralling downwards and fanned talk of a break-up of the economic bloc.

World oil prices edged up. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for November delivery was up 25 cents at $82.95 – the contract has rallied after briefly falling below $80 a barrel Thursday for the first time since June 2012. Brent crude for December delivery climbed 11 cents to $85.93.

Gold was at $1,239.35 an ounce against $1,241.90 late Thursday.

 

 

 

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