Indexes in Shanghai, Shenzhen retreat, while stocks rise in Tokyo and Hong Kong
Asian shares were mostly higher on Thursday after stocks eked out small gains on Wall Street following a mixed set of reports on the economy.
Benchmarks rose in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Sydney.
Stocks fell in Shanghai after China’s market regulator said it has launched an anti-monopoly investigation of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group HK:9988 BABA, stepping up official efforts to tighten control over the country’s fast-growing tech industries.
China also is ramping up its scrutiny of the practice of community group buying, summoning some of the nation’s largest tech companies for discussions as part of the anti-monopoly push.
China’s State Administration for Market Regulation also recently summoned six companies, including Alibaba and other e-commerce platforms such as JD.com JD and Pinduoduo PDD, gaming company Tencent HK:700, food delivery firm Meituan HK:3690 and ridesharing firm Didi Chuxing to talk about the potential ramifications of community group buying.
The Shanghai Composite index CN:SHCOMP lost 0.2%. Shares also fell on the smaller market in southern China’s Shenzhen CN:399106.
But elsewhere, Christmas Eve trading was upbeat. Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 index JP:NIK gained 0.4% on Thursday and the Hang Seng HK:HSI in Hong Kong edged 0.2% higher. In South Korea, the Kospi KR:180721 jumped 1.3% and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 AU:XJO rose 0.4%. Stocks advanced in Taiwan TW:Y9999 and Singapore SG:STI.
“Although some reshuffling of portfolios in emerging Asia was to be expected ahead of the holiday break, the underlying theme is a positive one,” Jeffrey Halley of Oanda said in a commentary.
On Wednesday, the S&P 500 SPX inched up 0.1% to 3,690.01. The benchmark index set a record high on Thursday and is up 14.2% so far this year.
Gains by financial, communication services, energy and other sectors were kept in check by declines elsewhere, including technology companies, which helped pulled the Nasdaq COMP slightly lower.
An hour before trading began on Wall Street, the government released an avalanche of data on the economy that showed some optimistic signs and several disappointing ones.
The Labor Department said fewer U.S. workers filed for unemployment benefits last week. The number is still incredibly high compared with before the pandemic, but it was better than economists were expecting.
Another report said that orders for long-lasting goods strengthened by more than expected last month, a good sign for the nation’s manufacturers.
But other reports were grimmer. Consumers pulled back on their spending by more last month than economists expected. It was the first drop since April and was mainly because incomes dropped sharply in November, by more than economists had forecast.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA added 0.4% to 30,129.83.
Stock futures initially dropped after President Donald Trump said that he may not sign the $900 billion rescue for the economy that Congress approved Monday night.
The hope in markets had been that the package might tide the economy over until widespread vaccinations can help the world begin to return to normal. The legislation includes one-time cash payments of $600 to most Americans, extra benefits for laid-off workers and other financial support.
Trump said late Tuesday that he wants to see bigger cash payments going to most Americans, up to $2,000 for individuals. He also criticized other parts of the bill.
But shares eventually drifted upward as investors looked past the unexpected pushback.
“Despite the churning of the Washington DC pond by vetos, new votes, and overrides, Wall Street clearly believes something positive will float to the top of the barrel when the churning stops,” Halley said.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 0.95% from 0.90% late Tuesday.
In other trading, U.S. benchmark crude CLG21 gained 12 cents to $48.24 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It gained $1.10 to $48.12 on Wednesday. Brent crude BRNG21, the international standard, added 14 cents to $51.38 per barrel.
The dollar USDJPY slipped to 103.52 Japanese yen from 103.54 yen late Wednesday.