Most Asia markets end week on a positive note; Nikkei gains amid weaker yen
Most Asia markets end week on a positive note; Nikkei gains amid weaker yen · CNBC

Asia markets were positive on Friday, amid a lack of cues from U.S. markets, which were shut Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday.

"There's a lot of repositioning," in the wake of Donald Trump's surprise election win on November 8, Herald Van Der Linde, head of equity strategy for Asia Pacific, at HSBC, told CNBC's " Squawk Box " on Friday.

"We saw a lot of money coming in over the course of this year into emerging markets," he noted, estimating that around 25 percent of that money had flowed back out since the U.S. election result. "There could be a little further to go," he said, but added that he believed the region's fundamentals were sound and there could be a buying opportunity.

Australia's ASX 200 (ASX: .AXJO) closed up 0.41 percent, or 22.721 points, at 5,507.8 after initially opening flat. But the benchmark's gains were capped by the all ordinaries gold sub-index, which was down by 2.13 percent.

BHP Billiton (London Stock Exchange: BLT-GB) climbed 2.28 percent to A$26.50 a share. The Australian miner announced early Friday it had approved $181 million to fund the compensation programs at its Samarco joint venture in Brazil.

Explorer Top End Minerals (ASX: TND-AU) surged 121.43 percent to $0.062 a share, after it announced it acquired a 60 percent interest in Myanmar's Cornerstone Resources.

In Japan, the Nikkei 225 (Nihon Keizai Shinbun: .N225) wavered toward the end of the session, but finished up 0.26 percent, or 47.81 points, at 18,381.22, while the Topix closed up 0.31 percent, or 4.57 points, at 1,464.53.

The dollar was fetching 113.4 yen (: OSEJPY=) as of 2:17 pm HK/SIN, a nearly eight-month high. A weaker yen usually supports exporters as it makes overseas earnings appear more attractive when they are repatriated and it can make export pricing more competitive overseas.

On Friday, government data showed that core consumer prices fell 0.4 percent in October on-year , in line with expectations of economists polled by Reuters.

It was the eight straight month of annual declines in core consumer prices, and will likely turn up the heat on policymakers to introduce more stimulus.

South Korea's benchmark Kospi (Korea Stock Exchange: .KS11) ended 0.16 percent higher, or 3.2 points, at 1,974.46. Hong Kong's Hang Seng (Hong Kong Stock Exchange: .HSI) was up 0.56 percent as of 3:10 pm local time.

Chinese shares regained their footing to trade positive, with the Shanghai composite (Shanghai Stock Exchange: .SSEC) closed up 0.61 percent, or 19,76 points, at 3,261.49 while the Shenzhen composite (Dow Jones Global Indexes: .DJSZ) finished up 0.394 percent, or 8.35 points, at 2,129.85.