Nikkei outperforms as Fanuc shares soar; rest of Asia lower
Nikkei outperforms as Fanuc shares soar; rest of Asia lower · CNBC

Asian shares outside Japan declined on Tuesday, as investors eyed a slew of corporate earnings due in the region and a two-day meeting by the Federal Reserve on clues of when interest rates in the U.S. could be lifted.

Wall Street underpinned the subdued mood by ending down overnight, failing to hold Friday's records. The tech-heavy Nasdaq (NASDAQ: .IXIC) led losses, down 0.6 percent as biotech stocks lagged. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (Dow Jones Global Indexes: .DJI) shed 0.2 percent, while the S&P 500 index (INDEX: .SPX) dropped 0.4 percent.

Nikkei gains 0.4%

Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 (Nihon Kenzai Shinbun: .N225) hurled itself back over the psychologically-important 20,000 mark early Monday, overlooking a larger-than-anticipated fall in retail sales, which slumped 9.7 percent on-year in March . This compared with a drop of 1.8 percent in the preceding month.

Heavyweight components provided the bourse with positive support; industrial robot maker Fanuc (Tokyo Stock Exchange: 6954.T-JP), which doubled its dividend payout to 60 percent, soared 3.3 percent to record highs, while Fast Retailing (Tokyo Stock Exchange: 9983.T-JP) scaled up 1.8 percent.

Earnings season remain underway; Komatsu (Tokyo Stock Exchange: 6301.T-JP) tumbled 3 percent on the back of an announcement saying that the company expects an 8.7 percent fall in operating profit for this fiscal year through March 2016. Honda Motor (Tokyo Stock Exchange: 7267.T-JP) trimmed gains to finish 0.3 percent higher ahead of quarterly earnings due for release after the market close.

Meanwhile, a merger between U.S.-based Applied Materials (NASDAQ: AMAT) and Tokyo Electron (Tokyo Stock Exchange: 8035.T-JP) to create one of the world's largest chip-making equipment fell apart due to opposition from U.S. anti-trust regulators. Shares of the latter plummeted 14.8 percent on the news.

Read More Japan earnings: No slowdown here

Mainland markets down

After witnessing choppy trade in the morning session, the Shanghai Composite crept deeper into the red to eventually close down 1.1 percent, well off Monday's seven-year peak.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index also reversed a higher open to finish the day little changed. The Hong Kong bourse had rose to its highest level since December 2007 in the previous session.

Sinopec (Shanghai Stock Exchange: 688-SZ) jumped 1.4 percent while PetroChina (Shanghai Stock Exchange: 1857-SZ) failed to capitalize on Monday's upward momentum, closing down 2.2 percent in Shanghai, after downplaying media reports that their parent companies would be merging. Shares of both firms sold-off in Hong Kong, down over 4 percent each.