Most Asian equities trade in red zone; Hang Seng plunges close to 1%

31 Oct 2011 Evaluate

All the equity indices in Asia barring the Japanese benchmark, exhibited sluggish trends as they traded with notable losses in Monday morning trades after optimism over the solution of Euro-zone debt trouble fizzled out and marketmen took a breather post seeing a sharp rally last week. Investors shifted their attention from Europe to the important US Federal Reserve meet and economic data that are scheduled to be announced later this week. Sentiments also remained weak amid absolutely no supportive cues from the US markets which closed on a mixed note on Friday despite the unexpectedly strong US September consumer spending data.

The benchmark in China and Hong Kong traded with significant losses amid reports that Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said tightening measures on the property market must continue at least until the year-end. On the other hand, Japan’s Nikkei defying all odds, climbed by around half a percent after export oriented stocks rallied on the back of depreciation in yen against the US dollar. The yen slipped after Japanese monetary authorities intervened in the currency market to curb its appreciation.

Shanghai Composite shed 8.93 points or 0.36% to 2,464.48, Hang Seng plunged 164.02 points or 0.82% to 19,855.22, Jakarta Composite sank 45.93 points or 1.20% to 3,784.03, KLSE Composite slipped 3.18 points or 0.21% to 1,478.64, Straits Times shaved-off 28.30 points or 0.97% to 2,877.42, Seoul Composite declined 12.56 points or 0.65% to 1,916.92 and Taiwan Weighted eased 7.58 points or 0.10% to 7,608.48.

On the flipside, Nikkei 225 climbed 45.80 points or 0.51% to 9,096.27.

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