Investing.com– Most Asian stocks were lower on Thursday tracking a subdued year-end performance on Wall Street, while Chinese stocks fell sharply after data showed a slower-than-anticipated rise in the country’s manufacturing activity.
Most major stock markets were closed a day earlier for the New Year holiday. Japanese and New Zealand markets remain shut.
U.S. stock index futures were lower in Asian trade on Thursday, after Wall Street declined at the end of 2024 as a “Santa Rally” largely failed to materialize.
Chinese stocks slump as manufacturing activity slows
China’s Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 fell 1.3% on Thursday, while the Shanghai Composite index declined 0.9%.
Chinese manufacturing activity saw weaker-than-anticipated growth in December, according to private purchasing managers' index (PMI) data released on Thursday, suggesting that the impact of recent stimulus measures is waning.
The Caixin PMI results follow government data earlier this week, which also indicated that the manufacturing sector expanded in December but at a pace below expectations.
Markets are holding out for more clarity on Beijing’s plans for stimulus measures in the coming year. Recent reports suggested that the country will ramp up fiscal spending to support economic growth.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index slumped 1.7% with China's Sun Art Retail (HK:6808) plunging more than 30% after Alibaba (HK:9988) said it would exit the firm by selling its majority stake for $1.6 billion.
Singapore shares muted after Q4 GDP
Singapore’s Straits Times Index was largely unchanged on Thursday.
Data showed that Singapore's economy experienced minimal growth in the fourth quarter, weighed down by sluggish export demand and slowing growth in China. Although on an annual basis, the economy grew more than 4% in 2024.