HONG KONG: Hong Kong shares rose 1.31 per cent on Tuesday after Wall Street was boosted by strong US manufacturing data.

The Hang Seng Index added 268.72 points to 20,790.98 on turnover of HK$63.14 billion ($8.10 billion).

US manufacturing activity sped up in March, with the Institute for Supply Management purchasing managers index (PMI) hitting 53.2, up from 52.4 in February. A reading above 50 indicates growth while anything below suggests contraction.

On Sunday China’s official PMI showed a surprise surge to a one-year high, providing some relief from recent concerns about a severe slowdown in the world’s number two economy.

The news lifted Wall Street with the Dow adding 0.40 per cent, the S&P 500 up 0.74 per cent and the tech-rich Nasdaq climbing 0.91 per cent.

Chinese developers led the market gains Tuesday on bargain-hunting. China Overseas Land soared 5.3 per cent to HK$15.84 while China Resources Land advanced 5.1 per cent to HK$14.00.

Sun Hung Kai Properties rose 2.0 per cent to HK$96.25 — following a 15 per cent slump in the past two sessions — ahead of a news conference later in the day by joint chairmen Thomas and Raymond Kwok.

Dealers had hoped it would offer some clarity regarding the tycoons’ arrest over a corruption probe at the end of last week. They were subsequently released on bail.

After the market closed the pair declared their innocence and said SHK would continue its business as usual.

Chinese aluminum producer Chalco rose 1.1 per cent to HK$3.71 after saying it plans to take a controlling stake in Mongolian coal producer SouthGobi for HK$7.20 billion.

Chinese markets were closed for a public holiday.

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HONG KONG: Hong Kong shares kicked off the second quarter with a fourth-straight loss on Monday, dragged by further weakness in Sun Hung Kai Properties as funds rolled out of the property giant after its billionaire owners were arrested.

Better-than-expected official China manufacturing data on Sunday failed to cheer the market, which was hit by disappointing 2011 corporate results. No improvement is expected for first quarter earnings due in mid-April, which would fan fears that the slowdown in China is hurting profitability more than anticipated.

The Hang Seng Index shed 0.2 percent, while the China Enterprises Index of the top mainland listings in Hong Kong rose 0.2 percent as bourse turnover neared a 2-1/2-month low.

Mainland Chinese markets are shut for a three-day public holiday and will reopen on Thursday, while markets in Hong Kong will be closed on Wednesday and Friday.

“It’s a very weak market today, with volume low largely because it’s going to be stop-start trading this week. Things also look like worsening with Sun Hung Kai and funds are now desperately getting out,” said Jackson Wong, Tanrich Securities’ vice-president for equity sales.

Sun Hung Kai Properties (SHKP), Asia’s largest property developer by market value, fell 2.2 percent in almost five times its 30-day average volume — standing out against lackluster turnover on the Hong Kong bourse.

SHKP has now lost a total of 15 percent in the two trading sessions since Hong Kong’s Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) last Thursday arrested SHKP Chairmen Raymond and Thomas Kwok.

No charges have been placed yet. A local English-language newspaper reported on Monday that SHKP’s billionaire owners are due to appear in court next week with former chief secretary Rafael Hui, who was also arrested.

SHK’s Hong Kong property sector peers were mixed. Sino Land , which shed 3.6 percent on Friday, rose 2.9 percent to regain last Friday’s losses. New World Developments, off 2.4 percent on Friday, dove 3.8 percent.

Greenheart Group was also hurt by renewed corporate governance fears, slumping 9.2 percent after the largest shareholder in its parent, Sino-Forest Corp, said on Monday that it has proposed a restructuring plan for the embattled Chinese forestry company.

CHINA DATA SURPRISE SHRUGGED OFF

Chinese banks and growth-sensitive sectors were mixed despite the official China Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) jumping to an 11-month high of 53.1 in March, up from February’s 51 and comfortably beating forecasts of 50.5.

A similar survey by HSBC, focusing more on smaller companies, showed factory output fell for the fifth straight month.

Aluminium Corp of China Ltd (Chalco) slipped 1.9 percent after agreeing TO a deal to buy Ivanhoe Mining Ltd’s controlling stake in Mongolian-focused coal miner SouthGobi Resources for $926 million.

Market observers said the wide disparity in the two PMI surveys released on Sunday did little to alleviate expectations of underwhelming first quarter earnings from Chinese companies, expected from mid-April.

Profits for China’s industrial firms fell 5.2 percent in the first two month of 2012, according to the industrial profitability indicator for March, published by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) last Tuesday.

This comes after a bruising 2011 earnings season that concluded on March 31. According to Thomson Reuters StarMine, of the 68 percent of Chinese companies that have reported 2011 earnings, 74 percent missed expectations. On Monday, Haier Electronics Group Co Ltd soared 8.2 percent in almost double its 30-day average volume after posting a 44 percent jump in 2011 net profit. It was one of the few companies to beat forecasts.

Monday’s surge let Haier regain its losses from last week after a peer in the Chinese consumption sector, GOME Electrical Appliances Holdings Ltd, plunged last Wednesday after posting subpar earnings. That tumble triggered a slew of broker downgrades.

On Monday, UBS analysts upgraded Haier to buy from neutral, and lifted its price target from HK$10.86 to HK$11.50. It also named Haier as a preferred pick in the Chinese consumer sector, one of the biggest disappointments in the 2011 results season.

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MUMBAI: Faced with lack of clarity on whether share sales by overseas investors will attract capital gains tax, uncertainty surrounding policy rate action by the central bank and quarterly results next month, foreign institutions have been building up short positions on Nifty index futures.

Data since last Friday shows that a decline in Nifty futures premium over its underlining, the Nifty 50, has been accompanied with a build up in open interest or outstanding positions, indicating creation of bearish bets.

Nifty futures hit a monthly low of 5171. Nifty index futures have declined steadily from 5285 last Friday to 5197 on Wednesday.

Simultaneously, open interest by foreign institutional investors (FIIs) has increased from 5.99 lakh contracts to 7.48 lakh contracts over the same period, indicating that sentiment is on the negative side.

“FIIs are playing the markets cautiously ahead of the imminent RBI policy meet and how corporate results play out next month,” said Karun Mutha, senior VP & head equity and derivatives advisory, HSBC InvestDirect, said.

“They have been building short positions in index futures, indicating that domestic events will be key determinants of market direction, going forward.”

The Union Budget for fiscal 2013 (April-March) introduced legislation that will, under certain conditions, deny double taxation treaty benefits to foreign institutions routing their money through Mauritius.

Fears that these investors would sell their Indian stock holdings following the new rule has negatively affected sentiment.

That apart, FIIs are treading cautiously ahead of the RBI monetary policy meeting on April 17 amid concerns the central bank may not cut rates given that the government has frontloaded its borrowing programme for the next fiscal year.

“The undertone in the Indian market remains nervous and a fresh bout of selling is not ruled out. At the same time, upside seems capped from here given the plethora of problems the Indian market is confronting,” Amar Ambani, research head of broker India Infoline.

The 200-day moving (DMA) average for the Nifty at around 5160 will be closely watched, said Ambani. The index closed at 5194.75 on Wednesday.

Monal Desai, head -institutional equities (derivatives) Prabhudas Liladher said many of the foreign investors could have sold Nifty futures to hedge their stock portfolios. Foreign institutions have poured roughly $9 billion into Indian stocks so far in 2012.

A few derivatives strategists feel that the build up in index futures OI has been caused by index arbitrageurs who are shorting Nifty against the purchase of a basket of stocks.

“At least 70% of the short positions should be from arbitrageurs,” said TS Harihar, head – institutional derivatives, ICICI Securities.

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LONDON: World stocks hit a 2012 high on Tuesday, after the Federal Reserve signalled it would continue supporting economic growth with loose monetary policy, with expectations the euro zone will agree a bigger crisis firewall adding to the positive tone.

MSCI’s main global stock index was up 0.6 percent at 337.95, its highest since August last year..

European shares rose for a second day, tracking gains on Wall St and in Asia, with the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index of top shares up 0.8 percent at 1,097.30 points.

The dollar traded near a one-month low against a basket of currencies while yields on U.S. Treasury bonds held near recent one-week lows after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke delivered a relatively cautious outlook for the U.S. economy on Tuesday.

“It is a significantly more dovish tone from Bernanke, which will give a boost for stocks. The prospect of easy monetary policy will help the housing market in the United States,” said Guy Foster, head of portfolio strategy at Brewin Dolphin.

“It will also have a knock-on effect to corporate financing and improve the terms of real estate loans. We are staying positive on risk and have a bias in favour of U.S. equities over European.”

While he did not hint at a third round of bond purchases, Bernanke made clear the U.S. central bank is in no rush to reverse course after responding aggressively to a deep recession.

The S&P 500 rebounded from last week’s drop to retake a four-year high on Monday, while Japan’s Nikkei jumped 2.4 percent on Tuesday to hit its highest level since the massive earthquake and tsunami on March 11 last year.

“Investors seem fairly confident that the Q1 equity rally is set to continue,” Barclays said in a note, citing a client survey that found 80 percent believed equities to be fairly- or under-valued.

Royal Bank of Scotland led gains, rising 5.5 percent on reports that Britain could sell as much as a third of its stake in the bailed-out bank to Abu Dhabi’s wealth fund.

The euro was down 0.1 percent at $1.3348, although it stayed close to a one-month high of $1.3368 hit on Monday on trading platform EBS.

The single currency drew support from Germany’s signal on Monday that it was willing to increase the resources available for fighting the debt crisis by combining the euro zone’s temporary and permanent bailout funds.

Expectations European Union finance ministers will agree on Friday to create a firewall big enough to protect Spain and Italy supported their bonds despite fears that Spain especially will not be able to meet budget targets it has already softened.

Italian and Spanish bond yields have eased from recent highs while German government bond prices reversed an early rise on Tuesday as growing risk appetite spurred gains in equities.

June Bund futures were one tick higher on the day at 136.75, after retreating from a session high of 137.21. Benchmark 10-year yields were a basis point lower at 1.94 percent.

Fears the euro zone debt crisis could escalate again as Southern European states struggle to push through unpopular reforms aimed at stimulating growth are nevertheless expected to underpin safe-haven assets such as Bunds.

Spain comfortably sold 2.58 bln euros in treasury bills on Tuesday, while Italy is due to sell zero coupon and inflation-linked bonds later ahead of an auction of medium- and longer-term debt on Thursday. The cost of insuring Italian and Spanish debt against default also fell.

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TOKYO: Japan’s Nikkei share average edged higher on Monday, recovering from last week’s retreat, as investors bought metal shares and picked up laggard blue chips, with a softer yen continuing to underpin market sentiment.

The Nikkei closed 0.1 percent higher at 10,018.24 points after logging its biggest one-day percentage fall in two months on Friday, while the broader Topix index was down 0.1 percent at 851.82.

“We are in a consolidation phase, so the market is just going sideways for now … It’s just going to be choppy for the next few days. Volumes do tend to get lighter when that happens,” a senior dealer at a foreign bank said.

More than 1.8 billion shares changed hands, up from 1.76 billion shares on Friday but down from an average of 2 billion shares last week. Topping the Topix core 30 as the biggest percentage gainer was Nissan Motor Co Ltd, which rose 2.5 percent.

The automaker is up 26.6 percent this year, underperforming a 35.5 percent gain in Toyota Motor Corp and a 30.6 percent rise in the transport equipment sector.

The non-ferrous metals sector was also in demand, rising 0.8 percent after Chile’s Codelco, the world’s top copper producer, reported a surge in profit and an increase in production. Mitsubishi Materials Corp added 1.1 percent and Sumitomo Metal Mining Co Ltd put on 1 percent.

Strategists said last week’s fall would entice many investors to pick up stocks as they failed to hop on the rally earlier this year, which has led to a 18.5 percent gain in the Nikkei since the start of January.

“What we’re seeing now is a typical excess liquidity market. Stocks that are gaining here – real estate, financials, iron and steel – these are all ‘bubble’ stocks that rise as a result of easy monetary policy,” said Kenichi Hirano, operating officer at Tachibana Securities.

Nomura Holdings sagged 2.7 percent, extending last week’s sharp sell-off, after sources told Reuters an employee at Japan’s top investment bank had tipped off fund managers at Chu Mitsui Asset Trust and Banking of a $6 billion share issue plan by Inpex Corp.

Despite the sell-off, Nomura shares are still up 57 percent this year.

Mobile gaming operator Gree Inc was also down sharply, shedding 5.2 percent in high volume, after a report citing an official that the government was considering an investigation into the company that could commence in April-May.

Short interest in Gree increased to 10.63 percent of outstanding shares on loan as of March 22, up from 9.49 percent on March 16, according to research firm Data Explorers.

EARNINGS MOMENTUM SUPPORT Despite concerns of a near-term pause, many banks were bullish on Japanese equities. Bank of America Merrill Lynch lifted its Topix target for the fiscal year 2012 to 950 from 900, or representing an upside of 11.5 percent from Monday’s closing level.

Societe Generale was also upbeat, recommending investors go long on the Nikkei and short the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index because of the weaker yen.

The yen was last traded at 82.586 to the dollar, well off an 11-month low of 84.187 plumbed on March 15 but down from Friday’s high of 81.97.

“Attractively prices, Japanese stocks will also be supported by the reconstruction effort post-earthquake which has experienced a slow take-off and will be running at full steam in the quarters ahead,” Societe Generale said in a note.

“In the meantime, Chinese companies’ earnings are strongly influenced by property sales and export growth, both decelerating.”

The earnings outlook for Japanese companies had improved markedly. The Topix’s earnings momentum, analysts’ earnings upgrades minus downgrades as a percentage of total estimates, turned positive to 3.6 percent this month from a 6.6 percent fall in February, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

That compared with an earnings momentum of minus 1.9 percent for the Hang Seng China Enterprises index and minus 0.2 percent for the S&P 500.

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US stocks closed mixed Wednesday after a quiet trading day that left the indexes little changed.

The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 45.57 points, or 0.3 percent, to 13,124.62. It had been up 20 shortly after the opening bell. The Dow had its biggest loss in two weeks on Tuesday, falling 68.94 points.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index closed down 2.63 points, or 0.2 percent, at 1,402.89. The Nasdaq composite average closed up 1.17 at 3,075.32.

Hewlett-Packard led the Dow lower, sliding 2.2 percent after saying it would combine its printer and PC divisions to save money and improve efficiency. H-P is coping with declining sales of PCs and printer ink as smartphones, tablets and electronic document-sharing gain popularity.

Earlier Wednesday, the National Association of Realtors released a mixed report about the state of the housing market. Sales of previously occupied homes dipped last month, but the sales pace for the winter was the best in five years, NAR said. Housing has been dragging on the economic recovery; an oversupply of homes has decimated construction and other trades in many parts of the country.

Without strongly positive or negative news to move the market, stocks meandered sideways for most of the day. John Manley, chief equity strategist for Wells Fargo Advantage Funds, said the lack of market-moving events is generally good for stocks. Traders are increasingly confident that the risks hanging over the market from Europe, oil prices and China will blow over, he said.

“If it hasn’t happened today, that means it might not happen tomorrow,” Manley said. “My guess is, no news means a slight upward bias to the market.”

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.30 percent from 2.36 percent late Tuesday. Gold and crude oil prices rose slightly.

Stocks closed lower on Tuesday after two reports signaled an economic slowdown in China. Supercharged growth in China over the past three years has helped sustain the global economic recovery. The Dow had its biggest loss since March 6.

The Dow is still up 1.3 percent this month and 7.4 percent so far this year. Other indexes are up even more for the year: The S&P 500 has gained 11.6 percent; the technology-focused Nasdaq composite 18.1 percent.

In a research report Wednesday, Goldman Sachs analysts urged investors to dump bonds and put money into stocks. The report argues that the weak economic growth in the United States and Europe is not universal, and that the 2010s could be the strongest period for world growth between 1980 and 2050.

It also argues that, while Japan’s two decades of economic stagnation in the 1990s and 2000s are a tempting comparison to what the U.S. and Europe face today, Japanese stocks were far more overvalued before Japan entered its decline.

“We think it’s time to say a `long goodbye’ to bonds, and embrace the `long good buy’ for equities as we expect them to embark on an upward trend over the next few years,” the report says.

Among stocks making big moves:

Baker Hughes fell 5.8 percent, the most of any company in the S&P 500, after the oil-field services company said its profit margin would fall below last quarter’s as companies shift from natural gas to crude exploration. Baker Hughes faces shortages of raw materials used in its pressure pumping business, a decline in fleet usage and higher-than-expected personnel and logistics costs.
Hartford Financial jumped 1.4 percent after the company said it would get out of the annuity business and focus on property and casualty insurance, group benefits and mutual funds. Hedge fund manager John Paulson had urged Hartford to spin off businesses.
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters soared 10 percent. The company said it was expanding its partnership with Starbucks to sell Starbucks’ Vue coffee packs for use in Green Mountain’s Keurig single-cup machines. The news relieved investors concerned that Starbucks’ new single-cup Verismo coffee machine might be a competitive threat to Keurig.

FSI International, which makes equipment for producing microelectronics, jumped 5.9 percent after the company reported that orders skyrocketed in the latest quarter, helping it beat analysts’ forecasts.

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HONG KONG: Asian stocks were mostly lower on Wednesday, weighed down by concerns over a slowdown in China’s economy, while oil prices edged back up after big falls in New York.

Receding concerns over the eurozone debt crisis provided support for the euro, which continued its thrust upwards against the yen and greenback.

Tokyo fell 0.55 per cent, or 55.50 points, to 10,086.49 in the first trading day after ending Monday at its highest level since the quake-tsunami disaster in March last year. The market was closed Tuesday for a public holiday.

Sydney fell 0.48 per cent, or 20.7 points, to 4,254.3, while Seoul fell 0.73 per cent, or 14.92 points, to 2,027.23.

Hong Kong shed 0.15 per cent, or 31.61 points, to 20,856.63 while Shanghai was flat, nudging 1.36 per cent higher to 2,378.20.

Concerns about China were raised on Tuesday when BHP Billiton said the country’s demand for iron ore looked to be flattening as its economy slows, with exports weakening.

The comments by BHP’s iron ore president Ian Ashby added to recent data that showed China’s biggest trade deficit in February since records began, manufacturing activity plodding and inflation at its lowest since June 2010.

It also comes after China cut its growth target to 7.5 per cent for 2012 from last year’s 9.2 per cent growth and 10.4 per cent in 2010.

Regional countries rely on fast-growing China to help drive their own economic expansion.

“Clearly any signs of a Chinese slowdown will manifest negatively,” Christopher Gore, currency analyst at Go Markets, said in a note according to Dow Jones Newswires.

“However the question remains, are we witnessing a hard-landing scenario in motion or China’s grand plan to promote sustainable long-term growth?”

The news weighed on US shares on Tuesday. On Wall Street the Dow index lost 0.52 per cent, the S&P 500 index fell 0.30 per cent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq was 0.14 per cent lower.

Oil prices nudged upwards on news of a huge fall in reserves in the United States.

The cost of the black gold has been fuelled by the ongoing standoff between Iran and the West over Tehran’s nuclear programme, which Washington and its allies claim is being used to build a bomb.

New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in May, rose 65 cents to $106.72 in the afternoon and Brent North Sea crude for May advanced 31 cents to 124.43.

Prices fell heavily on Tuesday in New York after Saudi Arabia said it was ready to help stabilise the market by making up for a supply shortfall to compensate for lost Iranian output caused by strict US sanctions.

The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday warned that a sharp spike in oil prices could hammer global growth.

IMF managing director Christine Lagarde estimated that crude oil prices could jump by up to 30 per cent if Iranian supplies were disrupted, causing “serious consequences” for the global economy.

The euro rose further as European sovereign debt worries eased after Greece on Tuesday received a payment of 7.5 billion euros under its second international bailout.

The common unit bought 111.01 yen in afternoon Asian trade on Wednesday, up from 110.66 yen in New York late Tuesday. The unit at one point spiked at 111.16 yen.

It also gained to $1.3260 from $1.3222, while the dollar was at 83.71 yen, from 83.70 yen.

The dollar may climb back above 84.00 yen if February home sales due later Wednesday show further signs of improvement in the US housing market, said Masafumi Yamamoto, chief forex strategist at Barclays Capital.

Gold was at $1,652.60 an ounce at 0810 GMT, compared with $1,648.48 late Tuesday.

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SHANGHAI: China shares ended down 1.4 per cent on Tuesday on worries over a rebound in domestic inflation after China raised retail gasoline and diesel prices.

The Shanghai Composite Index ended at 2,376.8 points, after rising 0.2 per cent on Monday.

China raised retail gasoline and diesel prices by between 6 and 7 per cent from Tuesday, marking the biggest increase in 33 months, a move that will help refiners reduce heavy losses but is unlikely to hit demand in a big way.

Shanghai Pudong Development Bank led banking shares down after Citigroup sold its entire stake in the Chinese lender, booking a profit of around $349 million.

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LONDON: World share markets stayed within touching distance of near eight-month highs while the euro and yen were steady against the dollar on Monday as markets took a breather after recent sharp gains.

US stocks had their best week in three months last week and European shares extended gains after waves of central bank liquidity eased concerns about the economic outlook as risks from the euro zone debt crisis eased.

A quiet week in prospect for economic data is keeping attention on oil prices, where concern over potential supply disruptions from Iran is underpinning prices and threatening the recovery hopes.

The FTSE Eurofirst index of top European shares opened down 0.2 percent at 1,104.04 points, as investors awaited further signs the world economy is improving before chasing the market’s brisk two-month rally.

“We expect risky assets to continue to hold their own, but given the lingering uncertainties, we prefer to remain close to the beneficiaries of a strong US economy,” Barclays Capital analysts said in a note.

The euro was flat at $1.3260, while the dollar index measured against a basket of major currencies was also unchanged at 79.81.

Brent crude was trading at $125.64 a barrel, down just 17 cents after settling up more than $3 on Friday.

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TOKYO: Japan’s Nikkei average climbed 1.5 percent to close above 10,000 for the first time in seven months on Wednesday, boosted by Wall Street gains after the Fed upgraded its US economic outlook, while Tokyo shares received a further lift from a weaker yen.

Exporters and financials outperformed, with Sony Corp jumping 5.2 percent, Nissan Motor Co Ltd up 3.8 percent and Japan’s leading investment bank Nomura Holdings Inc adding 3.4 percent.

“It’s only now that we begin to see foreign, real buying become more visible,” said Stefan Worrall, director of equity cash sales at Credit Suisse in Tokyo, adding that buy orders of the core 30 stocks and buying across the spectrum had increased.

“There’s a lot of money sitting on the sidelines that hasn’t benefited from the rally from the beginning of the year, who are finding themselves flatfooted. There will be further upside in the Nikkei rally if we see real money continue to come in.”

The benchmark Nikkei was up 151.44 points at 10,050.52, its highest closing level since July 26, after intraday forays above the 10,000-mark in the previous three sessions failed to hold until the close.

Plans for the launch of a growing number of investment trust funds which would support the market as they put their money to work added to the upbeat mood.

“In March, we are seeing a lot of new funds being created, or trying to be created. This might be positive for the market. The value of the funds are pretty big … the highest since February 2006,” said Jun Yunoki, equity analyst at Nomura.

The broader Topix climbed 1.4 percent to 857.11. More than 2.3 billion shares changed hands on the main board, down from 2.76 billion shares on Tuesday.

“People are picking up high-beta stocks now as the feeling that Japan’s market is still lagging global markets — plus the weaker yen — are providing a boost,” said Yasuo Sakuma, portfolio manager at Bayview Asset Management.

In terms of valuations, the Topix carried a 12-month forward price-to-book ratio of 0.97, lower than S&P 500′s 1.96 and STOXX Europe 600′s 1.37.YEN BOOST

Additionally, the dollar hit an 11-month high of 83.32 yen during Asian trade, lifting investor appetites for exporters.

Sharp Corp reversed earlier losses and rose 4.3 percent after a report that its President Mikio Katayama would resign as the company struggles to shore up its finances.

Earlier, the stock fell as much as 5.1 percent to its lowest since the 1980s, with traders citing concerns over its outlook and lingering speculation that it would need equity financing after a massive quarterly loss.

Bucking the market trend was Gree Inc, which shed 6 percent after Daiwa Capital Markets downgraded the social gaming company to neutral from buy and cut its six-month target price to 2,600 yen from 3,200.

Also heavily traded were Japanese banks Mizuho Financial Group Inc, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc, up between 2.2 and 2.6 percent.

Japan’s financials gained after their US peers led Wall Street to its best performance this year, buoyed also by Fed stress test results that gave high marks to most of the largest banks.

The stress test results by the US central bank came on the heels of an earlier announcement that the US economy was “expanding moderately” although growth still faced significant downside risks.

But lingering concern about the impact of rising gasoline prices on US consumer spending, and debt problems in Portugal and Spain meant the market was not free of worries.

“I do worry that we are in a Goldilocks market that may be overheated,” Bayview’s Sakuma said.

The benchmark Nikkei was in “overbought” territory, with its 14-day relative strength index at 76.8. Seventy or above is considered overbought.

March is the final month of Japan’s fiscal year, and market participants have been expecting many funds to lock in profit from the benchmark’s 18.9 percent rally since the beginning of January, after it shed more than 13 percent in April to December.

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© 2012 PUNTERCALLS : Information on Puntercalls Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha