Asian equities mixed on stronger currencies, earnings
Asian equities mixed on stronger currencies, earnings · CNBC

Asian equities traded mixed on Thursday, with Sydney and Tokyo coming under pressure as their local currencies strengthened against the greenback.

The dollar languished at three-month lows against a basket of major currencies in Asian trade after unexpectedly flat retail sales prompted fresh concerns over the state of the U.S. economy and its capacity to withstand rate rises. A rise in U.S. Treasury yields, with the benchmark 10-year note finishing the U.S. session at its highest level in more than 5 months, also forced investors to exercise caution, analysts say.

Wall Street also contributed to the downbeat sentiment by giving up early gains to finish Wednesday narrowly mixed. The tech-heavy Nasdaq settled 0.1 percent higher, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 finished marginally below the flatline.

Mainland markets choppy

China's Shanghai Composite index finished marginally above the previous day's close, as excitement over more government stimulus faded with easing measures already priced in, analyst from China Merchant Securities told Reuters.

Meanwhile, data for April showed money supply grew at its slowest pace on record, while investment growth sank to its lowest in nearly 15 years, adding on to the case of a stubbornly persistent economic slowdown.

Decliners for Thursday include major lenders and developers; Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (Shanghai Stock Exchange: 1398-SZ) and China Construction Bank (Shanghai Stock Exchange: 1939-SZ) traded 0.8 percent lower each, while Poly Real Estate (Shanghai Stock Exchange: 48-SZ) sold down 4.3 percent.

China Railway Group (Shanghai Stock Exchange: 1390-SZ) on Wednesday won a $390 million contract to build a Russian high-speed railway, that will become part of the new Silk Road project. But the news didn't seem to have much of a boost effect, with shares of the infrastructure firm slumping 2.6 percent.

Hong Kong shares traded indifferent for most of the session. In focus was Tencent (Hong Kong Stock Exchange: 700-HK), which bounced up 3.1 percent after announcing a 22 percent rise in first-quarter revenue and 7 percent growth in profits compared to the same period a year ago.

For the stock, HSBC maintains a "buy" rating and raised its target price to 182 Hong Kong dollars from 181 Hong Kong dollars, as analysts expect faster-than-expected growth in advertising to offset slower growth in gaming.

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Nikkei falls 1%

Japan's Nikkei 225 fell to a near one-week low as the yen (:OSEJPY=) hovered at the low-end of the 119 handle.