Asia markets mostly lower but Japan GDP supports Tokyo


(MENAFN- AFP) Asian markets mostly retreated Wednesday following recent gains but Tokyo hit a new 15-year high as the yen sank and data showed Japan's economy growing more than expected.

The euro suffered fresh losses after a European Central Bank official said it would ramp up its massive bond-buying programme, while Greece's debt reform talks with its creditors continued to lumber along.

Tokyo jumped 0.85 percent, or 170.18 points, to 20,196.56 -- its highest since April 2000 -- although car parts maker Takata plunged after a recall of US cars fitted with the firm's airbags doubled to 34 million.

Seoul was up 0.88 percent, closing 18.69 points higher at 2,139.54 and Shanghai rallied 1.22 percent in late exchanges.

However, Sydney ended marginally lower, giving up 5.2 points to 5,610.3, while Taipei fell 0.32 percent, or 31.46 points, to 9,685.31 and Wellington edged down 1.30 points to 5,775.79.

In the afternoon Hong Kong shed 0.23 percent and Singapore was off 0.40 percent.

Official Japanese data showed the economy grew 0.6 percent in the first three months of the year, after limping out of recession in the previous quarter. The figure was better than the revised 0.3 percent expansion in October-December and beat the market median forecast of a 0.4 percent on-quarter increase.

"The January-March GDP growth data were good... and buoyed sentiment," said Takuya Takahashi, senior strategist at Daiwa Securities.

"Corporate earnings for the fiscal year to March were (also) generally good and many companies took measures to return surplus to shareholders," he added, referring to share buy-backs and dividend hikes.

- Yen weakens -

Despite the result reducing the likelihood the Bank of Japan will further loosen monetary policy, the yen weakened further against the dollar with upbeat US figures supporting the greenback.

The dollar bought 121.05 yen Wednesday, compared with 120.68 yen in New York and well above 119.94 yen in Tokyo earlier Tuesday.

US housing starts in April climbed 20.2 percent to their highest level since November 2007, while there was a 10.1 percent jump in home building permits. The report seemed to indicate that the economy's abysmal first quarter was largely related to severe winter weather.

On Wall Street the Dow edged up 0.07 percent to an all-time high for the second day in a row but the S&P 500 slipped 0.06 percent, ending a three-day streak of record closures. The Nasdaq dropped 0.17 percent.

Traders were now waiting for the release of minutes from Federal Reserve's April 28-29 policy meeting to be released later Wednesday, looking for clues about its plan for lifting interest rates from record lows.

The euro eased to $1.1087 and 134.10 yen in Tokyo from $1.1149 and 134.54 yen in US trade after the ECB official said it would increase its asset purchases in May and June to offset an expected financial market slowdown later in the year.

In Tokyo, Takata took another heavy blow, plunging 10.2 percent after the announcement of a recall of US cars using its airbags, which have been linked to at least five deaths. The firm's shares have lost more than half their value since last year.

The announcement -- covering Honda, Toyota, General Motors, BMW and Ford, among others -- is on top of millions of other recalls worldwide.

Oil prices rebounded following sharp losses in the previous session owing to oversupply worries and a stronger dollar. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for July climbed 53 cents to $58.52 while Brent crude for July delivery gained 61 cents to $64.63 in afternoon trade.

Gold fetched $1,205.34 compared with $1,220.91 late Tuesday.


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