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Markets

Asian stocks mixed in holiday-hit trade

Published April 22, 2011 Updated April 22, 2011 03:42am

Asian StockHONG KONG: Asian stocks were mixed in holiday-hit trading on Friday, with Tokyo lower after a two-day rally and as the yen continued to strengthen against the dollar.

Tokyo's Nikkei was 0.48 percent lower by the break, Seoul was flat, Shanghai gained 0.15 percent and Taipei added 0.26 percent.

Markets in Hong Kong, Sydney, Jakarta, Singapore, Manila and Mumbai are closed for public holidays.

Dealers were taking a breather on Friday after the previous two-day rally that came on the back of strong earnings reports in the United States from corporate giants such as General Electric, Apple, IBM and Intel.

The Dow closed up 0.42 percent on Thursday, ending the week at its highest level since June 2008.

Those gains followed a big sell-off on Tuesday after Standard & Poor's downgraded its outlook for US sovereign debt, the first such threat to Washington's gold-standard AAA rating.

In Tokyo investors were low key ahead of a slew of earnings reports next week, while exporters were hurt by the stronger yen, which harms their competitiveness overseas.

The dollar stood at 81.68 yen in Asian trade, slightly down from 81.85 yen in New York late Thursday while the euro bought $1.4546 and 118.96 yen against $1.4550 and 119.11 yen on Thursday.

However, a senior trader at a major Japanese bank said the greenback may have reached its support level.

"We assume the dollar's downside adjustments over the past several days are mostly completed and quite trading can be expected in Tokyo because (most) other major financial markets in Asia are closed for the holiday," the trader said.

The US dollar has been heavily sold in the past few days as dealers have developed more risk appetite amid longer-term hopes for the global economy -- thanks to surging equities and strong corporate data -- while also being affected by lingering concerns over US debt.

On the bullion market, gold hit a fresh record high of $1,508.88 an ounce in London on Thursday, a day after topping $1,500 for the first time. It closed at $1,504.00 Gold markets in Hong Kong are closed for the Easter break.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2011

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