Asian markets give up early gains on weak China industrial data

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Asian markets were mixed in early trading Thursday, as optimism after British lawmakers rejected a no-deal Brexit was tempered by poor economic data from China and a warning from President Donald Trump that the U.S. may walk away from trade talks with China.

Trump spoke about China on Wednesday in Washington, and said that while he was optimistic a deal will be reached, he may walk if terms are not to his liking. “We’re making great deals, or we’re not going to make them at all. We’re going to go (with) tariffs,” Trump said.

On Thursday, China’s National Bureau of Statistics said industrial output slowed more than expected in January and February, suggesting China’s economy is slowing down. Value-added industrial output in China rose 5.3% in the January-to-February period from the year before, compared to 5.7% a year ago and economists’ projections of 5.5%. Thursday’s reading was the slowest pace of growth in 17 years.

That sent stocks falling in mainland China. After early gains, the Shanghai Composite














SHCOMP, -1.09%












  was last down 0.9% and the smaller-cap Shenzhen Composite














399106, -2.39%












  was off more than 2%. Stocks in Hong Kong














HSI, -0.03%












  gave up early gains as well, and were last up only about 0.1%. Japan’s Nikkei














NIK, +0.21%












  was up 0.6%, while South Korea’s Kospi














SEU, -0.15%












  was about flat. Benchmark indexes in Taiwan














Y9999, -0.25%












  and Singapore














STI, -0.19%












  were slightly lower. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200














XJO, +0.09%












  was up about 0.1%.

Among individual stocks, SoftBank














9984, +2.91%












  jumped in Tokyo trading after a report that it may lead a $1 billion investment in Uber Technologies’ self-driving car unit. E-commers company Rakuten














4755, +2.44%












  and Kobe Steel














5406, +1.66%












 also rose. Oil producer CNOOC














0883, +3.92%












  advanced in Hong Kong, while Apple














AAPL, +0.44%












  suppliers AAC














2018, -2.99%












  and Sunny Optical














2382, -2.33%












  sank. LG Electronics














066570, +1.97%












  rose in South Korea while Hyundai Motor














005380, -4.08%












  fell. Mining and oil stocks, such as Rio Tinto














RIO, +1.29%












  and Beach Energy














BPT, +4.23%












 , rose in Australia.

On Wall Street, stocks secured their third straight gain on Wednesday after health care and technology companies rose. Boeing














BA, +0.46%












  dipped briefly, but ultimately finished slightly higher, as the U.S. joined much of the world in grounding its 737 Max 8 aircraft after a fatal crash in Ethiopia on Sunday.

The broad S&P 500 index














SPX, +0.69%












  gained 0.7% to 2,810.92. The Dow Jones Industrial Average














DJIA, +0.58%












  added 0.6% to 25,702.89 and the Nasdaq composite














COMP, +0.69%












  climbed 0.7% to 7,643.41.

Oil prices advanced after a weekly U.S Energy Information Administration report showed that crude stockpiles fell by 3.9 million barrels from the previous week. This marked the second decline in three weeks.

Benchmark U.S. crude














CLJ9, +0.26%












  rose 10 cents to $58.36 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It gained $1.39 to settle at $58.26 per barrel on Wednesday. Brent crude














LCOK9, +0.40%












 , used to price international oils, rose 17 cents to $67.72 per barrel. It picked up 88 cents to close at $67.55 per barrel in London.

The dollar














USDJPY, +0.35%












  strengthened to 111.59 yen from 111.17 yen late Wednesday.

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Source : MTV