Asian Shares Fall as Oil Prices Drop -- Update
January 25 2016 - 10:42PM
Dow Jones News
By Chao Deng
Investors in Asia were back to selling Tuesday, as falling oil
prices delivered a fresh blow to the region's energy stocks.
In Hong Kong, the energy sector was down 4.9%, dragging down the
Hang Seng Index by 1.9%. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index of
Chinese firms trading in Hong Kong was down 2.5% at 7970.69. That
benchmark hit a closing low of 7835 last Thursday, and currently
trades at its lowest levels since 2009.
The Nikkei Stock Average fell 1.8%, with Tokyo-listed oil
developer Inpex Corp. down 4.3%,
The Shanghai Composite Index was down 2% and South Korea's Kospi
was down 0.9%. Markets in Australia and India are closed for
holidays.
The same concerns that have haunted stocks this year remain: Oil
prices are trading near multiyear lows, and investors are worried
about a slowing China and plans by the U.S. Federal Reserve to
raise interest rates. But increasingly, the oil market is driving
the action.
"The volatility [in oil] is not helping restore confidence back
in the market," said Robert Levine, head of Asian sales and trading
at brokerage CLSA. "It's not easy to put on new bets."
Brent crude oil gave up gains earlier in Asia to trade down 2%
at $29.90 a barrel. In the U.S., prices had fallen 5.7% on Monday
to $30.34 a barrel.
Brent oil is now down nearly 20% year-to-date. But its losses
haven't helped airlines, which usually benefit from lower costs on
oil. China South Airlines Co. Ltd. and Japan Airlines Co. Ltd.
slipped a fraction on Tuesday, leaving them down 21% and 1.6%
respectively year-to-date.
Worries about slower global growth are overshadowing the
benefits of lower oil, explained Mr. Levine.
In Japan on Tuesday, shares were getting pressure from the
Japanese yen, which strengthened by 0.2%, to Yen118.09 per U.S.
dollar. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. was down 3.2%.
South Korean shares fell after data showed that the country's
economy slowed sharply in the final quarter of 2015. Gross domestic
product expanded at a seasonally adjusted 0.6% in the
October-December period from the previous quarter, after a revised
1.3% gain in the third quarter.
The latest growth figure was exactly in line with the median
forecast of a 0.6% expansion in the fourth quarter, according to a
Wall Street Journal survey.
Gold, a safe haven, was up nearly 0.7% at $1,112.80 a troy ounce
early in Asia.
In the U.S., the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1.3%
overnight.
Kwanwoo Jun contributed to this story.
Write to Chao Deng at Chao.Deng@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 25, 2016 23:27 ET (04:27 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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