Asian stock markets without direction
Fears of a slowing global economy and optimism of the encouraging results of some American companies, the Asian markets do not know where to turn. The uncertainty has clearly won the Asian market. Despite opening up 1.1%, the Nikkei has disintegrated as the yen strengthened. The benchmark index of the Tokyo Stock Exchange lost a few minutes from 0.45% to close 9,258.41 points. The euro was worth 112.28 yen to 7:00 (-0.48%).
In other areas of the region, the mood is mixed. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong gained 0.52% to 20,370.35 points, the CSI 300 Index of Shanghai shows a slight increase from 0.06% to 2743.14 points, the Seoul Stock Exchange was up 0.65% 3659.85 points, the Sydney Stock Exchange ahead of 0.14% to 4409.80 points, and Mumbai was up 0.42% to 17,953.31 points.In contrast, the Singapore Straits Times Index lost 0.32% to 2939.08 points and Taiwan was down 0.12% to 7702.43 points.
Oil prices were slightly higher Wednesday in Asian electronic trading before the release of oil reserves in the United States, dealers said. In morning trading, a barrel of light sweet crude for September delivery was taking 5 cents to 77.63 dollars a barrel, while Brent North Sea with identical maturity, gained 9 cents to 76.31 dollars . Investors await the release Wednesday of weekly report on the status of stocks in the United States.According to analyst estimates, the reserves of crude will drop by 1.1 million barrels.
With the rise of the yen, export values are again in trouble, including automakers Toyota lost 2.55% to 3,055 yen, Nissan loose 0.65% to 609 yen or Honda was down 1.81% 2605 yen.
- Moody's deteriorating Japan, the Tokyo Stock Exchange fell slightly
- The Asian market is reviving
- Asian stock markets continue to surge
- Asian stock markets in the dark red
- Asian stock markets eased by China
