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Asian shares fall as US markets take the day offBy strong yen, AFP HONG KONG--Asian markets were mostly lower on Tuesday as Tokyo slipped following an uptick in the yen while Chinese shares fell on fears Beijing may act to rein in soaring property prices.
February 20, 2013, 12:02 am TWN With U.S. markets closed for the Presidents' Day public holiday, there were no drivers from New York. Tokyo's benchmark Nikkei 225 slipped 0.31 percent to end at 11,372.34 on profit-taking and as the yen rose after Japan's finance minister said the central bank's independence was safe for now. Seoul added 0.20 percent to 1,985.83 and Sydney ended 18.5 points, or 0.37 percent, higher at 5,081.9. Hong Kong lost 1.02 percent, or 238.03 points, to 23,143.91, while Shanghai shares closed down 1.60 percent, or 38.65 points, at 2,382.91 amid fears Beijing may tighten regulations in the sector to try to control home prices. “Negative factors, including rebounding property prices and inflation pressures, are gaining momentum,” Tebon Securities analyst Zhang Haidong told Dow Jones Newswires. In Tokyo, Finance Minister Taro Aso moved to reassure on the independence of the Bank of Japan and also said the government had “no intention” of asking the central bank to buy foreign bonds as part of its monetary easing policy. The yen rose after Aso's comments took the edge off Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's warning Monday that he would consider changing the law to take control of the bank if it could not achieve a new 2 percent inflation target. “We are not thinking about a law change at the moment,” Aso said at a regular news conference Tuesday. Abe's remarks had added to selling pressure on the yen, which was already weakened by the Group of 20's decision not to label Tokyo a currency manipulator over its recent monetary easing policy. Gold was at US$1,612.50 at 1050 GMT, compared with US$1,610.52 late Monday. In other markets: — Singapore closed 0.23 percent, or 7.63 points, higher at 3,295.77. Property developer City Developments was down 0.61 percent to SG$11.34 while United Overseas Bank gained 0.05 percent to SG$19.35. — Bangkok added 0.58 percent, or 8.78 points, to 1,532.07. Airports of Thailand dropped 2.98 percent to 114.00 baht, while coal producer Banpu rose 1.88 percent to 380.00 baht. — Kuala Lumpur lost 0.36 percent, or 5.86 points, to 1,615.07. CIMB shed 0.3 percent to 6.98 ringgit, Kuala Lumpur Kepong eased 0.4 percent to 21.20 and Malayan Banking dipped 0.3 percent to 8.84 while YTL Corp. gained 1.3 percent to 1.58 ringgit. — Jakarta slipped 9.98 points, or 0.22 percent, to 4,602.06. Palm oil producer Astra Agro Lestari fell 2.12 percent to 18,500 rupiah, food manufacturer Cahaya Kalbar lost 4.29 percent to 1,560 rupiah, and cigarette producer Gudang Garam rose 0.59 percent to 50,950 rupiah. — Wellington ended 0.71 percent, or 29.73 points, higher at 4,244.21. Contact Energy rose 3.4 percent to NZ$5.25, Telecom added 1.1 percent to NZ$2.28 and Sky City was flat at NZ$4.02. — Mumbai advanced 0.69 percent, or 134.64 points, to 19,635.72. Tech Mahindra climbed 4.82 percent to 1,034.0 rupees while ailing Kingfisher Airlines rose 5 percent to 10.53 rupees on hopes of fresh funding.
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