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Asia markets mixed as investors await China LPR, Japan inflation data this week

Sheng Peng | Visual China Group | Getty Images

View of the central business district skyline at sunset in Beijing, China.

This is CNBC's live blog covering Asia-Pacific markets.

Asia-Pacific stocks were mixed Monday as markets kickstarted what ING calls a "quiet" week for economic data from the region.

Key data this week from Asia will include China's loan prime rate, set to be released Wednesday. ING said no change is expected in China's LPR, with the one-year rate currently at 3.1% and the five-year LPR at 3.6%.

Japan will release trade data on Wednesday and October headline inflation numbers on Friday, while Australia's central bank on Tuesday will release minutes of its meeting earlier this month.

Japan's markets were the outlier in the region, with the benchmark Nikkei 225 down 1.09% and closing at 38,220.85, while the broad-based Topix was 0.73% lower at 2,691.76.

South Korea's Kospi rose 2.16% and ended at 2,469.07, leading gains in Asia, and powered by a 5.98% rise in heavyweight Samsung Electronics, while the small-cap Kosdaq reversed losses to climb 0.6% and finish at 689.55.

Australia's S&P/ASX 200 advanced 0.18% to 8,300.2, marking a third straight session of gains and hitting its highest closing level in about a month.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng index was 0.82% higher in the final hour of trading, while mainland China's CSI 300 fell 0.46% to close at 3,950.38.

On Friday in the U.S., all three major indexes on Wall Street declined as investors worried about the path of interest rates and sold off pharmaceutical stocks.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.70%, while the S&P 500 slipped 1.32% and the tech heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 2.24%.

Losses in pharmaceuticals weighed on the blue-chip Dow and the S&P 500, with Amgen falling about 4.2% and Moderna sliding 7.3%.

This comes after President-elect Donald Trump said on Thursday that he planned to nominate vaccine-skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

— CNBC's Brian Evans and Alex Harring contributed to this report.

Xiaomi shares climb ahead of better third quarter earnings release

Shares of Chinese tech firm Xiaomi climbed as much as 3.75% on Monday as investors awaited the company's third quarter results, out after Asia markets close.

Data compiled by LSEG indicates that the company is expected to report better results on revenue, gross profit, and net profit on a year-on-year basis.

Xiaomi's revenue is expected to come in at 91.11 billion yuan ($12.58 billion), compared to the 70.89 billion yuan recorded in the third quarter of 2023.

Gross profit is forecast to increase to 18.72 billion yuan from 16.11 billion yuan last year.

— Lim Hui Jie

Country Garden submits offshore debt restructuring plan to creditors, Reuters reports

China's Country Garden submitted the preliminary terms of an offshore debt restructuring proposal to some creditors late last month, said five sources familiar with the matter, as the struggling property developer tries to avoid liquidation.

The proposal includes a revised cash flow projection, said two of the sources who have direct knowledge and another person familiar with the matter, a standard part of a debt restructuring process to show to creditors the firm's ability to meet its obligations.

The projection shows the developer expects a weaker cash flow in coming years compared with the estimates it had shared with some offshore creditors earlier this year, two of the sources said.

— Reuters

New Zealand output producer prices grow at fastest rate since March 2023

New Zealand's output producer price index has grown 4.2% year on year for the third quarter of 2024, marking its fastest rate of increase since the quarter ended March 2023.

On a quarter-on-quarter basis, the PPI grew 1.5%, its fastest rate of growth since the third quarter of 2022.

The output PPI measures the change in prices received by producers of goods and services in the country.

— Lim Hui Jie

Singapore non-oil domestic exports surprise with a 4.6% drop in October

Singapore's non-oil domestic exports fell by 4.6% in October compared to the same period last year, surprising economists polled by Reuters who had estimated a 2.6% growth.

The figure also was a reversal from the revised 0.9% gain last month.

On a month-on-month basis, Singapore's NODX tumbled 7.4%, a sharper decline than the revised 0.6% fall in September and missing Reuters poll expectations of a 2.3% rise.

— Lim Hui Jie

Samsung shares climb more than 7% after surprise $7 billion buyback plan

Shares of Samsung Electronics jumped on Monday after the company unveiled a surprise plan to buy back about 10 trillion South Korean won ($7.19 billion) worth of its own stock over the next 12 months.

The South Korean tech giant's stock rose more than 7% in Seoul, after shares had already surged 7.21% on Friday, following news that the company reached a preliminary agreement with its largest workers union, which went on strike in July.

Samsung last bought back shares in November 2017, according to data maintained by LSEG.

In a regulatory filing, the company said that 3 trillion won of shares will be initially bought back in the next three months and canceled.

Read the full story here.

— Lim Hui Jie

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— Amala Balakrishner

Small-cap stocks pull back this week

Small-cap stocks have seen outsized losses this week, reversing course after the postelection rally.

The Russell 2000 has dropped around 4% this week, hurt in part by a slide of more than 1% on Friday. The S&P 500 has lost just 2.2% over the course of the week.

That marks a turn after the Russell 2000 jumped more than 8% last week. Small caps are seen as beneficiaries of President-elect Donald Trump's victory, as his preference of deregulation can aid tinier firms.

Despite this week's declines, the Russell 2000 is up nearly 5% in November. It is poised to finish 2024 more than 13% higher.

— Alex Harring

Health care leads weekly losses

The health-care sector lost 5.3% on the week, making it the worst-performing group in the S&P 500.

Materials and information technology were the following biggest decliners, falling 3.1% and 2.9%, respectively.

The only sectors on pace to end the week in the green were financials and energy, which were up 1.3% and 0.9%, respectively.

— Hakyung Kim

Chicago Fed's Goolsbee still sees rates on a downward path

David A. Grogan | CNBC
Austan Goolsbee speaking at Jackson Hole on Aug. 23, 2024.

Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee expressed confidence Friday that the central bank is on the way to achieving its economic goals and can continue to lower interest rates.

"To me, the conditions on the dual mandate side are looking pretty balanced," Goolsbee said during a CNBC "Squawk Box" interview. "So we should be thinking over the next year, year and a half, the rates need to come down."

However, Goolsbee also endorsed phrasing Thursday by Fed Chair Jerome Powell that the Fed does not need to be in "a hurry" to cut.

"Unless the conditions change, I'm still feeling good about us being on a 12- to 18-month path of getting the rates down to something like neutral," he said.

— Jeff Cox

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