Asian markets cautious ahead of major corporate earnings

AFP  |  Hong Kong 

Stocks were mixed in Asian trade on Tuesday as investors move cautiously ahead of a deluge of corporate results later in the week.

With all markets now open again after an extended break, many fluctuated in morning trade but rallied by the afternoon.

stocks ended marginally up for a third straight session, with profit-taking before 10 days of holidays in weighing on the market.

Seoul, and gained while Hong Kong, and were down.

Investors are waiting for a number of major earnings releases expected this week, including Amazon, Facebook, Microsoft, and

"Some of the world's biggest companies are reporting earnings this week as well as a raft of the big European banks," Nick Twidale, at Australia, said in a note to clients.

"Investors will be hoping for some better-than-expected results from both groups to keep the topside momentum in global equities, however if the data starts to show a significant slowing across these key industries then expect both stocks and risk trades to start to come under some heavy pressure."

Aerospace giant will report earnings on Wednesday for the first time since a deadly March 10 plane crash plunged the company into crisis-mode.

Financial analysts have already slashed their 2019 profit forecasts after announced earlier in April it was cutting its monthly production of the 737 by about 20 per cent.

In early morning trade in Europe, climbed while and fell slightly.

Separately, Sri Lankan stocks plunged by 2.6 per cent -- their biggest drop in four years -- as reopened for trading after terror attacks on Sunday killed more than 300 people.

While equity traders were generally cautious, prices continued their rally on Tuesday, jumping to near six-month highs after the US cracked down on Iranian exports.

The announced Monday it was calling an end to six-month waivers that had exempted countries from unilateral US sanctions on Iranian exports.

Starting in May, these countries -- China, India, Turkey, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and -- would face sanctions if they continue to buy the oil.

"This points to a big drop in the supply side, which boosts the commodity's price.

Iran's to 1.3 million barrels, according to latest figures in end March," said Margaret Yang Yan, at

But she said that "the sustainability of oil's rally depends on Saudi and other OPEC members' actions to increase in the month to come."

Stephen Innes, at SPI Asset Management, said rising prices meant USD 80 a barrel was now a "possibility".

"Oil quickly repriced higher on fears that markets could face an immediate supply crunch, adding more pressure to the already tenuous global supply squeeze," said Innes.

Energy and also climbed, with Tokyo-listed rallying 2.8 percent and oil refiner up 1.1 per cent.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, April 23 2019. 13:55 IST