Asian shares are higher after Wall Street logged modest losses, as investors await key U.S. inflation data. Benchmarks rose across the region, but stayed in a relatively narrow range.
Investors will get closely watched U.S. inflation data on Thursday. The focus is on how it might impact ultra-low interest rates and other market-supporting policies.
There's a sense of every man for himself ahead of the U.S. inflation data this evening, a data point that has left markets in limbo and seems to be taking an interminably long time to arrive, Jeffrey Halley of Oanda said in a report.
The Labor Department's release of the consumer price index comes shortly before a meeting next week of the Federal Reserve's Open Market Committee, which sets policy on interest rates and other measures.
Trading has been relatively constrained this week, with investors parsing any data to judge whether rising inflation will be temporary, as the Federal Reserve thinks, or more permanent.
Tokyo's Nikkei 225 rose 0.3per cent to 28,958.56 and the Kospi in South Korea picked up 0.3per cent to 3,224.64. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng added 0.2per cent to 28,799.15, while the Shanghai Composite index advanced 0.6per cent to 3,614.41. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.4per cent to 7,302.50.
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On Wednesday, a slide in banks and industrial companies nudged stocks on Wall Street to modest losses after an early gain faded in the last half-hour of trading. Stocks championed by hordes of online retail investors, the meme stocks as they have become known, were volatile once again.
The S&P 500 slipped 0.2per cent to 4,219.55, erasing its meager gain from a day earlier. The benchmark index's modest moves this week have it on track for its first weekly loss in three weeks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gave up 0.4per cent to 34,447.14, while the Nasdaq held up somewhat better, ending down just 0.1per cent at 13,911.75.
The tech-heavy index was lifted by the same Big Tech companies that have pushed it generally higher for the last 18 months. Microsoft rose 0.4per cent and Amazon added 0.5per cent.
Treasury yields slipped. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 1.48per cent from 1.52per cent late Tuesday. The falling yields have weighed down banks, which rely on higher yields to charge more lucrative interest on loans.
Small company stocks, which have outgained the broader market this year, also fell. The Russell 2000 index gave up 0.7per cent to 2,327.13.
Elsewhere in the market, volatility in stocks embraced by investors using online forums like Reddit continued. Clover Health fell 23.6per cent while AMC Entertainment sank 10.4per cent. Wendy's sank 12.7per cent after soaring 25.9per cent a day earlier.
The original meme stock, GameStop, said after the closing bell Wednesday that it has brought in a pair of Amazon veterans as its new chief executive and chief financial officer to aid in its much anticipated digital turnaround. The company also reported a smaller quarterly loss than a year ago as revenue increased. Its shares fell 3per cent in after-hours trading.
In other trading, U.S. benchmark crude dropped 40 cents to USD69.56 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It lost 9 cents to USD69.96 per barrel on Wednesday.
Brent crude, the international standard, gave up 42 cents to USD71.80 per barrel.
The U.S. dollar was trading at 109.49 Japanese yen, down from 109.64 late Wednesday. The euro weakened to USD1.2171 from USD1.2182.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)