Asian shares were mixed Tuesday as investor sentiment remained cautious amid worries about the next development in trade talks between the United States and China.
Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 NIK, -0.38% lost 0.2% in morning trading. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 XJO, +0.70% edged up 0.3% while South Korea’s Kospi 180721, -0.45% slipped 0.5%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng HSI, +1.07% gained 0.7%, while the Shanghai Composite index SHCOMP, +0.47% was up 0.5%.
Among individual stocks, Yahoo Japan parent Z Holdings 4689, -9.00% sank in Tokyo trading a day after rallying on merger news. SoftBank 9984, -1.55% , Sony 6758, -1.34% and also fell while Rakuten 4755, +1.06% edged up. In Hong Kong, CSPC 1093, +3.16% urged, while AAC 2018, +4.60% and Sunny Optical 2382, +3.56% also gained. LG Electronics 066570, +1.26% rose in South Korea, and Woolworths WOW, +1.21% gained in Australia.
On Wall Street, all three major indexes edged above the all-time highs they set on Friday. The S&P 500 SPX, +0.05% rose 1.57 points, or 0.1%, to 3,122.03. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.11% gained 31.33, or 0.1%, to 28,036.22, and the Nasdaq composite COMP, +0.11% climbed 9.11, or 0.1%, to 8,549.94.
“With no significant data releases in Asia today, attention in the region will remain focused on trade concerns and Hong Kong. Neither is likely to inspire the confidence of market participants,” said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at Oanda.
Chinese indexes were rising moderately despite the continuing unrest in Hong Kong. Police have tightened their blockade over Hong Kong Polytechnic University, where some protesters are trapped and hundreds who left have been arrested.
The U.S. market has been on a tear since early October, and indexes have been on a nearly uninterrupted run as worries about a possible recession have faded. Solid economic data, better corporate earnings than analysts expected and interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve have all helped.
That leaves negotiations in the U.S.-China trade war as the remaining wild card for the market. President Donald Trump had earlier hoped to have signatures on the first phase of a trade deal by now, at a major international summit that was scheduled for this past weekend. But the president of the summit’s host nation, Chile, canceled the meeting last month amid nationwide protests.
The two sides are continuing to negotiate, with stock markets around the world swinging on every hint of progress or tension.
Counterbalancing those losses were big gains for technology stocks, particularly chip makers. They bolted higher after the Commerce Department gave another 90-day extension for Chinese tech giant Huawei to continue doing business with U.S. companies.
“Risk sentiment can be seen little changed amid the conflicting reports on US-China trade as we remain in a very headline driven reality,” said Jingyi Pan, market strategist at IG in Singapore.
“Asia markets had once again commenced with a lackluster tone, one that we are growing accustomed to amid the lack of clarity counting down to the December tariffs deadline.”
Benchmark oil CLZ19, -0.23% fell 11 cents to $56.94 a barrel. It fell 67 cents to $57.05 a barrel Monday. Brent crude BRNF20, -0.16% , the international standard, slipped 13 cents to $62.31 a barrel.
The dollar USDJPY, -0.05% fell to 108.63 Japanese yen from 108.84 yen Monday.
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