
SEOUL, October 16 (AJP) - Asian shares extended gains on Thursday as expectations for a U.S. rate cut outweighed concerns over renewed trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.
Korea’s benchmark KOSPI jumped 2.49 percent to close at a record high of 3,748.37, driven by strong foreign and institutional buying. Nine of the top 10 blue chips advanced, led by an 8 percent surge in Hyundai Motor and a 7 percent rise in Kia Motors amid growing optimism for a breakthrough in Seoul–Washington tariff talks.
The Supreme Court’s ruling on SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won’s $1 billion divorce case drew heavy attention, sending related stocks in mixed directions. SK hynix climbed 6.98 percent to 452,000 won (US$318.61), while holding company SK Inc. slid 5.62 percent to 218,500 won. Preferred shares of SK Discovery, another Chey-affiliated firm, eased 1.25 percent to 35,550 won.
Elsewhere in the region, Taiwan’s TAIEX continued its upward momentum, rising 1.36 percent to 27,647.87, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 added 1.27 percent to close at 48,277.74.
China-related markets remained subdued. The Shanghai Composite Index fluctuated throughout the session before ending 0.1 percent higher at 3,916.23, while the Shenzhen Component Index slipped 0.25 percent to 13,086.41. Data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed declines in both the consumer price index and producer price index, heightening concerns over slowing domestic demand.
Markets in Hong Kong and Singapore opened lower as financial shares retreated. Investors worried that further U.S. rate cuts could compress banking-sector margins. The Hang Seng Index and Straits Times Index were each down about 0.3 percent in afternoon trading.
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