ASIA STOCKS: Asian Equities Mostly Higher, HK Tech Outperforming

Feb-12 02:27
  • Japanese equities returned from a holiday with a mixed session. The Nikkei gained 0.4% supported by a weaker yen aiding exporters, while the Topix is down 0.10%. Toyota declined 1.8%, dragging on broader sentiment. Investors are shifting from AI-heavy semiconductor stocks toward electronic components and machinery.
  • China/Hong Kong are higher today with the HSI up 1.65% as Alibaba surged 5.8% on reports of an Apple partnership for AI in China, the HS Tech Index is +2%. Optimism around DeepSeek’s AI innovation also bolstered sentiment, with UBS strategists saying the rally may be “less than halfway” done. However, MSCI cut 20 Chinese stocks from its indices, extending a trend of lower global exposure, this seems to have weighed on mainland equities with the CSI 300 up just 0.15%.
  • South Korean equities are trading 0.20% higher today however both major tech stocks (Samsung, -0.50% & SK Hynix, -0.20%) struggle. Taiwan's TAIEX is 0.40% higher.
  • Australian equities opened lower, however have since erased losses as CBA reported first-half earnings in line with analyst estimates, but warned of economic headwinds as growth slows. Despite initial weakness, shares rebounded as much as 1.4% to a record high. The ASX 200 is trading 0.30% higher, New Zealand equities are unchanged.
  • Indian equities have struggled recently with the Nifty 50 down about 3% over hte past week as continued selling from foreign investors hurts sentiment. The rupee rallied sharply, its biggest gain in two years, on suspected central bank intervention, reversing recent record lows.

Historical bullets

ASIA STOCKS: Hong Kong & China Equities Struggle, Following PBOC Comments

Jan-13 02:23

Chinese equities are under pressure despite the PBOC's latest efforts to support the yuan, with early trading showing most indexes lower. Investors remain unimpressed as today's PBOC comments and Governor Pan's remarks offer little new information. The timing of the announcement, coinciding with onshore market closures, contrasts with prior morning interventions that lifted stocks. Underwhelming economic data and rising geopolitical tensions are further dampening sentiment.

  • The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index fell as much as 1.9%, led by Shenzhou International (-5.2%) and Sunny Optical (-4.8%), making it one of Asia's worst performers. The HSCEI is down more than 18% since October 7, on track for its sixth consecutive daily decline and nearing a technical bear market.
  • The HSI is 1.95% lower with HS Tech down 1.70%, while property stocks are lower, although outperforming the wider market, with the Mainland Property Index down just 0.60%. In mainland China equities, the CSI 300 is down 0.45%, while small-cap benchmarks are mixed.
  • Broader Asian sentiment also weakened, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropping 0.8%, while US equity futures are also trending lower with S&P 500 eminis 0.35% lower, while Nasdaq eminis are trading 0.40% lower.
  • China Trade balance data is due out at some point during the session, with expectations of a $100.00b surplus, slightly above November's reading of $97.44b

MNI: CHINA 2024 EXPORTS +7.1% IN YUAN TERM: CUSTOMS

Jan-13 02:12
  • CHINA 2024 EXPORTS +7.1% IN YUAN TERM: CUSTOMS
  • CHINA 2024 IMPORTS +2.3% IN YUAN TERM: CUSTOMS

CNB: USD/CNH Drifting Lower Amid PBoC Stability Vow, Still Above Recent Lows

Jan-13 02:07

USD/CNH is holding close to session lows, last near 7.3500. This is a modest CNH gain of around 0.15%. USD/CNY is a down in the first part of dealing, but is holding above 7.3300 at this stage. Recent lows in USD/CNH were at 7.3132, recorded last Monday. The 20-day EMA support level continues to track higher, last around 7.3250. 

  • We saw a raft of headlines earlier following an FX markets meeting in Beijing. The headlines were largely in line with on-going rhetoric around FX markets. Critically the PBoC noted that the yuan will stay at a reasonable balance level and that it will prevent FX overshooting.
  • It was also announcement that the cross-border macro prudential for local firms would be raised to 1.75 from 1.50. This allows local companies to raise more funds offshore and is designed to alleviate pressure on the yuan (by boosting the supply of offshore currencies onshore). The last time we had adjustment higher was in July 2023.
  • PBoC Governor Pan also made comments, which crossed the wires. He reiterated the comments around the yuan, while also noting liquidity will remain supported via RRR and interest rate cuts. This is in line with previous rhetoric from the Governor. Pan stated focus should be on supporting consumers, which comes after Vice Premier He Lifeng made similar remarks late on Friday.
  • Note we get retail sales data for Dec on Friday, as well as Q4 GDP.
  • Headlines on Dec trade figures are also starting to cross.