FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Open Week Lower in Monday Trading

By

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts opened the week tracking modestly lower Monday morning, declining 0.20% to 2,861.92 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.

From North Asia, the gainers were led by semiconductor company Himax Technologies (HIMX) and biopharmaceutical company Zai Lab (ZLAB), which surged 18.4% and 9.7% respectively. They were followed by education company 51Talk Online Education Group (COE) and education company 17 Education & Technology Group (YQ), which climbed 9.2% and 4% respectively.

The decliners from North Asia were led by diagnostic imaging centers company Concord Medical Services (CCM) and utilities company Korea Electric Power (KEP), which dropped 11.5% and 5.2% respectively. They were followed by used car marketplace Uxin (UXIN) and video streamlining service iQIYI (IQ), which lost 2.9% and 0.4% respectively.

From South Asia, the only gainers were telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK) and fintech firm Trident Digital Tech (TDTH), which were up 0.7% and 0.5% respectively.

The decliners from South Asia were led by tech conglomerate Sea (SE) and computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN), which fell 4.8% and 2.9% respectively. They were followed by IT firm Infosys (INFY) and lender HDFC Bank (HDB), which were down 2.3% and 1.9% respectively.

Related Articles

Asia Markets

Swiss Stocks Kick Off Week Little Changed; Ams-Osram Shares Gain

The Swiss Market Index was 0.01% higher on Monday's close, as investors gear up for a busy week of economic data prints and business surveys across Europe and other major global markets.ABB (ABBN.SW) is investing $200 million over the next three years to bolster its medium-voltage manufacturing and technology capabilities in Europe, with $100 million earmarked for a new facility in Italy. The other half will be allocated for capacity expansion projects across the Switzerland-based electrification and automation company's manufacturing facilities in Bulgaria, Finland, Germany, Norway and Poland. The stock was up 1.88% at closing.Ams-Osram (AMS.SW) saw its shares surge 13.22% as it agreed to sell its CMOS Image Sensor business to indie Semiconductor for a total consideration of 40 million euros. The divestment is part of the light and sensors manufacturer's accelerated deleveraging plan and continued efforts to focus on core digital photonics growth vectors, with the deal anticipated to complete within the next six months."While [CMOS Image Sensor] represents a strong technology platform, our strategic priority is to concentrate investments on those AI driven segments that offer the most promising growth prospects and where we clearly differentiate - including AI Photonics and AR smart glasses," Ams Osram Chief Executive Officer Aldo Kamper said. "At the same time, the expected cash proceeds provide an additional contribution to our accelerated balance sheet deleveraging. Our transformation into the Digital Photonics powerhouse is progressing."Switzerland's economic news calendar was empty for the day, while the release of the country's April producer and import prices and first-quarter industrial production data are on this week's agenda. Market watchers are also awaiting the April US inflation rate figures and Eurozone ZEW Economic Sentiment Index for May, among other key data releases.

$^SSMI$ABBN.SW$AMS.SW
Asia Markets

German DAX Closes Flat Amid Stalled US-Iran Peace Talks

German shares were little changed, with the blue-chip index gaining 0.05% at Monday's close, as peace negotiations between the US and Iran remain in limbo.The diplomatic impasse deepened Sunday as Iran's latest offer, which included war reparations, the end of the US naval blockade, and recognition of the country's sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, was summarily dismissed by US President Donald Trump as "totally unacceptable" in a post on his social media platform Truth Social. Danske Bank noted that oil prices saw a 6% gain over May 8's close, with Brent trading around $106 per barrel by Monday morning.For the week ahead, key European economic releases include Germany's final April inflation and May ZEW survey on Tuesday, alongside first-quarter gross domestic product and industrial production figures for the broader eurozone on Wednesday. The market is also expected to focus on the meeting between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping scheduled for Thursday and Friday.On the corporate side, E.ON (EOAN.F) climbed 1.87% after agreeing to purchase British energy supplier Ovo. The acquisition is expected to bring 4 million customers to the German utility company and bolster its digital energy business.Meanwhile, Hannover Re (HNR1.F) slipped 2.62% at the end of the trading day, as the German reinsurer's first-quarter net income of 710.6 million euros missed the consensus estimate of 721 million euros, overshadowing the 47.9% surge in annual earnings."Q1 net income was a 1% miss, with [property and casualty] top-line a big miss and [life and health] top-line a beat... Negatives were L&H EBIT at EUR204m (20% miss vs cons EUR254m), driven by lower investment income and a negative currency result, and P&C revenue at EUR4,480m (13% below cons) due to [foreign exchange and structured reinsurance] volume declines, with Q1 new business [contractual service margin] -27% y/y," RBC Capital Markets said in a quick-take report. "While the stock has been weak into results, and the shares trade on a recent PE low, we would expect a muted first reaction, although the key message of resiliency is likely to resonate with existing shareholders."

$^DAX$EOAN.F$HNR1.F
Asia Markets

UK Shares Gain Amid PM Starmer's 'Reset' Speech; Compass Advances

London's FTSE 100 closed 0.36% in the green on Monday as Prime Minister Keir Starmer vowed to reinforce ties with Europe as part of efforts to create a "stronger, fairer Britain.""The last government was defined by breaking our relationship with Europe. This Labour government will be defined by rebuilding our relationship with Europe by putting Britain at the heart of Europe so that we are stronger on the economy, stronger on trade, stronger on defence, you name it," Starmer said in his so-called reset speech.Amid calls for him to quit, Starmer's speech in Central London also included a proposal to nationalize British Steel, pending a public interest test and royal assent of the new bill, which will be formally presented to parliament this week."Strong domestic steel production is vital for our economy, and this legislation would allow us to ensure stability for British Steel's workers, suppliers and customers and avoid damaging disruption to crucial supply chains, while we consider options for the [Scunthorpe] site's future," said Business Secretary Peter Kyle.In corporate news, food services company Compass Group (CPG.L) climbed 2.34% after profit attributable to equity shareholders for the six months ended March 31 increased year over year to $1.07 billion from $919 million on revenue growth."A solid H1 performance ~1% ahead of consensus for underlying EBITA and EPS. Net new business wins of +3.8% for H1 a touch below the typical 4-5% range (with Q2 implied rate muddied by Q1 rounding), but promise of H2 acceleration should be taken reassuringly. Guidance for FY underlying EBITA growth ticked up by at least 1 pp which appears to be driven by organic operating leverage," RBC Capital Markets said in its quick take note.International Consolidated Airlines Group (IAG.L) was one of the top stocks, rising 6.42%, amid plans to repurchase its outstanding 825 million euros of 1.125% senior unsecured convertible bonds due 2028.

$^FTSE$CPG.L$IAG.L