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Asia-Pacific markets were mixed Monday as escalating trade tensions kept investors on edge.
U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters Sunday that he was planning to announce a blanket 25% tariff on all steel and aluminum imports on Monday, according to Reuters.
Over in Japan, the benchmark Nikkei 225 ended the day flat at 38,801.17, while the broader Topix index edged down 0.15% to close at 2,733.01.
The country reported loan growth of 3% year on year in January, falling slightly from December’s 3.1%.
South Korea’s Kospi closed flat at 2,521.27, while the small-cap Kosdaq advanced 0.91% to 749.67.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index climbed 1.67%, while mainland China’s CSI 300 Index rose 0.11%, changing course from losses earlier in the day.
Consumer inflation in China rose to a five-month high in January on the back of higher spending in the lead up to the Lunar New Year, data released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Sunday revealed. The consumer price index rose 0.7% month on month and 0.5% annually in January — more than Reuters’ 0.4% estimate.
Meanwhile, its producer price index, which captures the wholesale price of goods, fell 2.3% from the previous year in January, more than the 2.1% drop expected by Reuters.
Investors will also be keeping an eye on Indian stocks that fell Friday, after the Reserve Bank of India expectedly cut interest rates for the first time in five years.
Indian stocks extended previous session’s losses to open lower. The benchmark Nifty 50 was down 0.94%, while the BSE Sensex index fell 0.83%.
Singapore’s benchmark Straits Times Index hit an all-time high of 3,910.12 points, LSEG data showed, led by gains in the shares of telecommunications operator Singapore Telecommunications and well as local banks DBS Group Holdings, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation and United Overseas Bank.
The STI benchmark was trading up 0.68%.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 ended the day 0.34% lower at 8,482.80.
The three key U.S. indexes fell Friday after U.S. President Donald Trump’s said he was planning reciprocal tariffs on trading partners. Markets were further pressured by the release of consumer sentiment and jobs data which pointed to a pickup in inflation and spiked the 10-year Treasury yield above 4.5% at its session high.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 444.23 points, or 0.99%, to close at 44,303.40. The S&P 500 declined 0.95% to 6,025.99, and the Nasdaq Composite slid 1.36% to end at 19,523.40. Friday’s losses left the major averages in negative territory on the week.
— CNBC’s Sean Conlon and Hakyung Kim contributed to this report.
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