Asian equities display mixed trends; investors await German vote

29 Sep 2011 Evaluate

Stock markets in Asia are trading on a mixed note in Thursday’s morning session as investors in the region remained cautious over Europe’s ability to contain the European sovereign debt trouble as leaders in the region had conflicting views on resolving the crisis. Sentiments also remained uninspiring as all eyes of jittery investors were on Germany's parliament as politicians there are scheduled to vote later today on whether to increase a fund to bail-out Greece. Overnight US markets too did little to lift sentiments as they snapped a three-day winning streak despite bigger than forecast rise in demand for capital goods in the US though orders for durable goods fell slightly in August.

The benchmark in South Korea was the top gainer in the space, recovering from the negative opening and trading with about a percent gain as Technology counter pushed the market higher. Stocks in Tokyo plunged around a percent as export-oriented stocks got dragged by the yen’s appreciation against the euro.

Shanghai Composite declined 16.98 points or 0.71% to 2,375.08, KLSE Composite eased 0.92 points or 0.07% to 1,370.63, Nikkei 225 plunged 84.63 points or 0.98% to 8,531.02 and Straits Times shed 9.18 points or 0.34% to 2,691.99.

On the flipside, Jakarta Composite advanced 10.75 points or 0.31% to 3,523.91, Seoul Composite surged 16.77 points or 0.97% to 1,739.86 and Taiwan Weighted gained 16.95 points or 0.24% to 7,163.93.

Hong Kong financial markets and businesses are shut.

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