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Asian markets end mixed
Dec 8 2022 3:26PM
Asian stocks ended Thursday's session on a mixed note, as fears of a global economic slowdown and uncertainty on whether the Federal Reserve will slow the pace of its interest rate hikes largely offset optimism over easing of strict COVID containment measures in China.

Markets also keenly awaited U.S. inflation data as well as the outcome of the Fed and ECB policy meetings next week for further clues on the direction of monetary policy.

China's Shanghai Composite index finished marginally lower at 3,197.35 while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index jumped 3.38 percent to 19,450.23 on reports that the city is considering further easing of COVID measures, including scrapping the outdoor mask mandate and shortening the isolation period for people who test positive for the virus.

Japanese shares closed near one-month low on concerns about the impact of Fed policy on growth and corporate earnings.

Traders also reacted to data showing that Japan's economy contracted slower than expected in the third quarter and the country's current account unexpectedly turned to deficit in October.

The Nikkei average dropped 0.4 percent to 27,574.43, marking its lowest close since Nov. 10. The broader Topix index ended 0.35 percent lower at 1,941.50.

Tokyo Electron, Orix, Sony, Konami Holdings and Nidec fell 1-3 percent. SoftBank Group rallied 2.2 percent after a report that its billionaire chairman and CEO, Masayoshi Son, has raised his stake in the firm to 34 percent, taking him closer to a point where he could bid to take the conglomerate private.

Seoul shares fell for a fifth day running on U.S. rate hike woes. The Kospi average slid 0.49 percent to settle at 2,371.08.

Australian markets extended losses for a third straight session as falling commodity prices on worries about a possible global recession weighed on the mining and energy sectors. Gold miners advanced after a more than 1 percent spike in gold prices overnight.

Link Administration Holdings shares crashed as much as 10 percent before closing 1.5 percent lower at A$3.33. The company said it had ended talks with Canada's Dye & Durham Ltd to sell its corporate markets and banking and credit management businesses for A$1.27 billion.

Across the Tasman, New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index finished marginally higher at 11,617.14. Air New Zealand shares rose nearly 2 percent after the country's flagship carrier increased its earnings forecast for the first half of fiscal 2023.

(Source:RTT News)