By Carla Mozee, MarketWatch
LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) -- Stocks in Hong Kong and in much of
the rest of Asia held to gains Friday following a batch of economic
data from China that were roughly in line with analyst
expectations.
The Chinese government said third-quarter gross domestic product
climbed 7.8% from a year earlier, meeting projections in separate
Reuters and Dow Jones Newswires surveys of economists. Growth in
retail sales slightly trailed the consensus forecast, while that
for industrial production slightly exceeded the estimates.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index stayed with its 0.7% advance after
the reports, and the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index -- which
tracks mainland Chinese firms listed in Hong Kong -- picked up
0.5%. The Shanghai Composite Index extended its gain to 0.2% from
0.1%
The Australian dollar (AUDUSD) bounced up after the data, buying
as much as 96.30 U.S. cents compared with 96.11 U.S. cents ahead of
the reports. But the spike was short-lived as the Aussie drifted
back down to 96.06 U.S. cents. Australia is often sensitive to the
economic outlook of its top export market.
Australian stocks, meanwhile, as measured by the S&P/ASX 200
were largely unchanged at 0.7%.
But Japanese shares returned to losses, pulling the Nikkei Stock
Average down 0.6%, while South Korea's Kospi logged a 0.1%
rise.
The Chinese economic figures also included 10.2% growth in
September industrial output, compared with an above-forecast 10.4%
in August, and slightly exceeding a 10.1% consensus estimate from a
Dow Jones Newswires survey. September retail sales eased to a 13.3%
annual growth rate, after a 13.4% increase in the previous month.
The result trailed a 13.5% estimate from the Dow Jones Newswires
poll.
In Hong Kong, casino stocks rallied, with Sands China Ltd.
surging 9% after the Macau subsidiary of Las Vegas Sands Corp.
(LVS) posted a 43% rise in third-quarter net revenue to $2.34
billion. Its rivals also benefited, as MGM China Holdings Ltd.
(2282.HK) rallied 3.4%, and Wynn Macau Ltd. (WYNMY) jumped 5% .
But shares of Lenovo Group Ltd. (LNVGF) fell 2.3% following a
report in The Wall Street Journal that the PC maker is considering
a bid for beleaguered mobile-phone maker BlackBerry Ltd. (RIMM)
.
Japan's blue-chip exporters dragged after an overnight rise in
the yen, with industrial major Komatsu Ltd. (KMTUF) off by 0.9%,
and steel mill JFE Holdings Inc. (5411.TO) slumping 3.5%.
in Sydney, oil producer Santos Ltd. (SSLTY) fell 1% after
posting a drop in third-quarter output and placing its full-year
production outlook at the low end of its previous guidance.
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