SINGAPORE — Shares in Asia-Pacific traded blended on Monday morning, with buyers watching Alibaba’s inventory in Hong Kong following one more improvement between affiliate Ant Group and billionaire Jack Ma.
Hong Kong-listed shares of Alibaba slipped 1.7% in Monday morning commerce. That got here after Ant Group stated in a tweet that a latest report by Reuters that the agency was ways for Jack Ma to exit had been “unfaithful and baseless.”
Reuters reported over the weekend that monetary know-how large Ant is “exploring choices” for Ma to divest his stake within the agency and “hand over management,” citing “a supply aware of regulators’ pondering and two individuals with shut ties to the corporate.”
Other Hong Kong-listed shares of Chinese tech companies additionally declined, with Tencent falling about 1% whereas Meituan shed 0.83%. The Hang Seng TECH index slipped 0.84%.
The broader Hang Seng index within the metropolis additionally declined 0.5%.
Mainland Chinese stocks edged decrease because the Shanghai composite slipped 0.25% and the Shenzhen component fell 0.186%.
Elsewhere, the Nikkei 225 in Japan dipped 0.23% whereas the Topix index shed 0.26%. Japan’s exports in March surged 16.1% as in contrast with a 12 months earlier, Ministry of Finance information confirmed Monday. That was a lot increased than the 11.6% improve anticipated by economists in a Reuters ballot.
Meanwhile, South Korea’s Kospi gained 0.21% whereas the S&P/ASX 200 in Australia rose 0.28%.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outdoors Japan traded 0.3% decrease.
Currencies and oil
The U.S. dollar index, which tracks the buck towards a basket of its friends, was at 91.709 after a latest decline from above 91.8.
The Japanese yen traded at 108.69 per greenback, stronger than ranges above 109.2 towards the buck seen final week. The Australian dollar modified fingers at $0.7709, having risen from beneath $0.768 final week.
Oil costs dipped within the morning of Asia buying and selling hours, with worldwide benchmark Brent crude futures down about 0.8% to $66.24 per barrel. U.S. crude futures additionally slipped 0.7% to $62.69 per barrel.