Asia-Pacific stock indices rebounded positively on Monday after the U.S. stock market rallied at the end of last week.
Australian and Hong Kong stock exchanges as well as U.S. and most European countries are closed because of the Christmas holiday.
The Bank of Japan is not going to abandon its ultra-soft monetary policy any time soon, Central Bank Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said.
Last week, the Japanese central bank unexpectedly widened the range within which the yield on ten-year government bonds can fluctuate to plus/minus 0.5% per annum from plus/minus 0.25% previously. Investors took that as a signal that the Bank of Japan was preparing to abandon the ultra-soft monetary policy that it had been pursuing for years.
But Kuroda on Monday rebutted that view, saying that the corridor widening was aimed at boosting the effect of monetary policy and was not the first step in abandoning a major stimulus program. He also noted that the country’s consumer inflation rate could slow below the Bank of Japan’s 2% target in the next fiscal year, which begins in March 2023.
The value of Japan’s Nikkei 225 index rose by 0.65% in trading.
Shares of electronic components maker Sharp Corp. (+3.6%) and commodity companies including JGC Holdings Corp. (+3.5%), Inpex Corp. (+2.5%) and Nippon Steel Corp. (+2.3%) were among the leaders.
In addition, chip maker Advantest Corp. (+1.2%), clothing retailer Fast Retailing (+2%), consumer electronics maker Sony Group (+0.3%), automakers Nissan Motor (+1.9%) and Toyota Motor (+0.3%) went up.
Mitsubishi Electric Corp. and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. announced Monday that they intend to merge their generator businesses to become more competitive in the market. The companies plan to sign a definitive agreement at the end of May 2023 and complete the merger of the units by April 1, 2024. Mitsubishi Electric is expected to become the majority shareholder of the new merged company, while Mitsubishi Heavy Industries will become a minority shareholder.
Mitsubishi Electric’s share price rose 1.3 percent and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries rose 2.7 percent.
China’s Shanghai Composite index gained 0.65% over the day.
Technology and consumer companies, including Huizhou China Eagle, up 1.5%; Shenzhen Infinova, Zhejiang Netsun and Xi’an Catering, up about 10%; and automaker BYD, up 4.1%.
The People’s Bank of China on Monday provided banks with 216 billion yuan ($30.9 billion) in reverse repurchase transactions to ensure sufficient liquidity in the financial system at the end of the year. Last week the net inflow of funds into the country’s financial system amounted to 704 billion yuan, the highest weekly infusion since October.
The value of the South Korean Kospi index increased by 0.15%.
Stocks of one of the world’s largest chip and electronics maker Samsung Electronics Co. fell 0.3% and automaker Hyundai Motor rose 0.6%.
A strong rise in quotations showed securities of pharmaceutical companies Kyongbo Pharmaceutical and Samil Pharmaceutical – by 16.3% and 4.5%, respectively.