Fly On Wall Street

Hong Kong drops nearly 3% as Chinese stocks tumble; tech stocks fall

SINGAPORE — Chinese stocks fell Friday as the rest of Asia-Pacific traded mixed, while Wall Street stocks rallied overnight and oil prices fell.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 2.47% to close at 21,404.88, paring some losses after plunging nearly 3% earlier. The Shanghai composite was down 1.17% to close at 3,212.24, and the Shenzhen component fell 1.89% to 12,072.73. The CSI 300 dropped 1.8% to 4,174.57.

Shares of Hong Kong-listed Russian aluminum producer Rusal surged more than 10% in early trade before reversing to tumble 5.74%. The stock dropped earlier this week after the firm said Monday it was evaluating the impact of a ban announced Sunday by the Australian government on exports of alumina and aluminum ores to Russia.

Rusal shares in Moscow had shot up nearly 16% when markets resumed trading in Russia on Thursday after a month-long shutdown.

JD Logistics shares dived nearly 14%, dropping below its offer price. In a filing with the Hong Kong stock exchange in the morning, the firm said it will raise 8.53 billion Hong Kong dollars ($1.09 billion) through a share sale. The subsidiary of e-commerce giant JD.com said the shares will be priced at 20.71 Hong Kong dollars a piece.

The Hang Seng tech index fell nearly 5%, with Alibaba losing 5.62%, Tencent falling 2.62%, JD down 4.72%, and Meituan plunging 8.16%. Delisting fears continued to be in focus with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission adding Chinese social media platform Weibo to a list of Chinese stocks facing the risk of being delisted from the U.S.

Other Asia-Pacific markets

Japan stocks moved between positive and negative territory, but the Nikkei 225 closed 0.14% up to 28,149.84, and the Topix closed flat to 1,981.47. Japan reported inflation data, showing its core consumer price index hit a two-year high in March, according to Reuters.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 stayed in positive territory as it inched up 0.26% to 7,406.20, with some gains in miners. South Korean stocks struggled for direction, trading between gains and losses. The Kospi last sat above the flatline and settled at 2,729.98.

Top gainers in Asia afternoon trade include mining firm MMG and Singapore agricultural firm Olam which was up 4%. Notable losers included Nio, which fell 4.9% and China Life Insurance, which was down 2.3%.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan traded around 1% lower.

Singapore’s Straits Times index was up 0.58% in the afternoon. Research firm Capital Economics and DBS Bank analysts said Friday they now expect Singapore’s central bank to tighten policy at its meeting next month after a major loosening of the country’s Covid restrictions on Thursday.

“Yesterday’s easing of virus restrictions in Singapore exceeded what we had expected and now means the risks to our above-consensus growth forecast of 4.0% this year are to the upside,” said Alex Holmes, emerging Asia economist at the firm. “The measures are also likely to add to inflationary pressures, further increasing the chance that the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will tighten policy at its meeting next month.”

U.S. stocks rallied overnight, led by chip stocks. The Dow jumped 349.44 points, or 1%, to close at 34,707.94. The S&P 500 added 1.4% at 4,520.16, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 1.9% to 14,191.84.

Stocks have seesawed this week, alternating between up and down days. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq are on track to close the week higher.

Apple supplier stocks

Investors watched shares of Apple suppliers in Asia. The tech giant is reportedly planning a hardware subscription service for iPhones that could launch as soon as the end of this year. Apple rose over 2% on Thursday.

In Japan, shares of Apple suppliers rose. Murata Manufacturing shares jumped 1.22%, while Alps Alpine climbed 1.15%. Taiyo Yuden was up 1.06%.

Over in Taiwan, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company jumped 1.18%, while shares of Hon Hai Precision Industry slipped 0.47%.

Currencies and oil

Oil prices were in focus, after falling almost 2% overnight after a volatile session. During Asia trade on Friday, U.S. crude was down 0.14% to $112.21 per barrel, and Brent was little changed at $118.99.

″[International Energy Agency] members are seeking to reduce their use of its crude,” said ANZ Research analysts Brian Martin and Daniel Hynes. They noted IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said the group is ready to release more oil from emergency stockpiles if needed.

Contributing to oil’s decline, Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries officials have also expressed to the EU their discomfort on a proposed ban on Russian oil, Reuters said citing OPEC sources.

In currencies, the U.S. dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of its peers, was at 98.613, dropping from levels around 98.7 earlier.

The Japanese yen traded at 121.67 per dollar, softer compared to earlier. The Australian dollar was at $0.7504, as it continued to jump from levels around $0.74 earlier in the week.

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