Singapore Stock Exchange

Asian Stocks Mostly Lower On U.S. Shutdown

Alex Gray
Publish date: Mon, 14 Oct 2013, 01:53 PM
Alex Gray
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Most Asian stocks traded lower Monday as the U.S. government shutdown stretched in another week and following some discouraging Chinese data points. Japanese markets are closed today for a holiday.
In Asian trading Monday, Hong Kong's Hang Seng jumped 1.16% and the Shanghai Composite added 0.40% despite the aforementioned disappointing data points.
Earlier Monday, China's National Statistics Bureau said the country's producer price index (PPI) contracted 1.3% last month after falling 1.6% in August. Analysts expected a September decline of 1.4%.
In a separate report, the Statistics Bureau said China's consumer price inflation rose to 3.1% last month from 2.6% in August. Analysts expected a September increase to 2.9%.
SINGAPORE shares fell on Monday, snapping four consecutive sessions of gain, as a possible US default loomed closer and Chinese data showed export growth fizzled in September to post a surprise fall.
The benchmark Straits Times Index dropped 0.7 per cent to 3,158.15 points, the biggest decline in almost two weeks. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was 0.2 per cent lower.
Some of the biggest decliners on the Singapore index include casino operator Genting Singapore Plc and commodities trader Noble Group Ltd, which fell more than 2 per cent each.
Shares of Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) outperformed the market, rising 0.5 per cent.
Over the weekend, China, the world's second-largest economy said September exports contracted 0.3%, well below analysts' estimates of growth of 6%. Imports rose 7.4%.
Those data points weighed on Australian stocks sending that country's S&P/ASX 200 down 0.8%. The Australian Bureau of Statistics said that Australian home loans fell 3.9% last month after a 2.1% rise in August. Analysts expected a September decrease of 2.5%.
Riskier assets came under pressure as U.S. policymakers are still deadlocked regarding reopening the government.
Some traders are growing skittish that such an agreement will not arrive in enough to avert debt ceiling debacle. The U.S. must raise the debt ceiling by October 17 or risk defaulting on its sovereign debt obligations.
New Zealand's NZSE 50 lost 0.28%. Like Australia, New Zealand, counts China as its largest export market. South Korea's Kospi inched down 0.05%.
Singapore's Straits Times Index shed 0.72 after the city-state said its third-quarter GDP fell 1% following a second-quarter surge of 16.9%. Economists expected a 4% contraction.
S&P 500 futures slumped 0.67%. The benchmark U.S. index climbed 0.63% last Friday.
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