Asian Shares Mixed; Election Results Buoy India, Australia

Asian Shares Mixed; Election Results Buoy India, Australia

Asian shares mixed, India and Australia up on election outcomes.

BANGKOK — Shares were mixed in Asia on Monday, with India and Australia leading gains for the region following elections that looked set to keep incumbents in office.

In Australia, the S&P ASX 200 rose 1.7% to 6,476.10, boosted by a shock election victory for Prime Minister Scott Morrison. His conservative, pro-business government looked set to form a majority government, leaving bewildered voters wondering how they were taken by surprise since the opposition Labor Party had been expected to win.

Voting in India’s election, which lasted more than five weeks, ended with exit polls predicting Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist party and its allies will win another five years in office.

The election has been seen as a referendum on Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party, whose main opposition is the Congress party, led by Rahul Gandhi, the scion of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty that has produced three prime ministers.

The outcome appeared to please investors, as the benchmark Sensex added 2.7% to 38,950.96.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 index edged up 0.2% to 21,301.73 after the government reported Monday that the world’s third-largest economy grew at a better-than-expected 2.1% annual pace in January-March.

Economists had been forecasting a contraction, but strong residential demand and government spending helped keep the economy expanding for a second straight quarter.

“We continue to expect the Japanese economy to expand only modestly in 2019, with growth constrained by weak exports and a deceleration in capital spending,” Stefan Angrick of Oxford Economics said in a research note. “The recent escalation in trade tensions will further weigh on momentum in 2019-2020.”

Markets in Shanghai and Hong Kong fell back in the absence of any positive updates on the trade standoff between the U.S. and China.

The Shanghai Composite index lost 0.5% to 2,867.72 while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index slipped 0.6% to 27,768.26.

Elsewhere in Asia, South Korea’s Kospi was flat at 2,055.71. Shares rose in Taiwan and Indonesia, while markets were closed for public holidays in Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore .

ENERGY: Benchmark U.S. crude picked up 71 cents to $63.47 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It lost 11 cents to $62.76 per barrel on Friday. Brent crude, the international standard, climbed 88 cents to $73.09 per barrel.

CURRENCIES: The dollar rose to 110.12 Japanese yen from 110.08 yen on Friday. The euro weakened to $1.1152 from $1.1161.

Share:
error: Content is protected !!