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Home » Asia-Pacific. Stocks Mixed as Markets Brace for China’s Trade Snapshot

Asia-Pacific. Stocks Mixed as Markets Brace for China’s Trade Snapshot

by Neoma Simpson

Investors weigh Japan’s surprise GDP slump and await key export data that could signal the region’s economic direction

MARKET INSIDER – Asia-Pacific markets opened the week on an uneven footing Monday as investors looked to China’s November trade report, a data release that could shape sentiment across global equities. Economists surveyed by Reuters expect a meaningful rebound, forecasting a 3.8% rise in exports and 3% growth in imports, signaling a potential stabilization after months of fits and starts in the world’s second-largest economy.

But optimism was tempered by fresh evidence of weakening momentum in Japan. Revised government data showed the country’s economy contracted at an annualized 2.3% in the July–September quarter — worse than initial estimates and underscoring the pressure on Asia’s long-standing growth engine. The Nikkei 225 slipped modestly, while the broader Topix managed a marginal gain as traders recalibrated expectations for corporate earnings and Bank of Japan policy.

Elsewhere in the region, South Korea’s Kospi hovered near the flatline, and the tech-heavy Kosdaq climbed nearly half a percent. Australia’s ASX 200 edged lower ahead of Tuesday’s Reserve Bank of Australia rate decision, with most economists expecting the central bank to hold rates steady at 3.60% through 2026, extending one of the longest policy pauses among major economies.

Mainland Chinese and Hong Kong markets saw mild strength. The Hang Seng inched up 0.24% and the CSI 300 rose 0.43%. One standout storyline was the sharp pullback in Moore Threads, a Beijing-based GPU maker whose shares tumbled more than 5% after a staggering 400% surge on its Shanghai debut last week — a reminder of both investor enthusiasm and volatility in China’s semiconductor sector.

Global sentiment remained constructive after Wall Street closed higher Friday, pushing the S&P 500 to its fourth straight winning session and within 0.7% of its all-time high. But Asia’s cautious tone reflects a broader question hanging over markets this week: Can China’s trade recovery extend long enough to anchor regional growth?

For now, investors are waiting for the answer.

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