Shares in Asia rose on positive indications about recovery after Japan's government said their economy will expand for the first time in three years and industrial production rose at the fastest pace in six months in November, while China upwardly revised prior growth figures. Japan's Nikkei 225 Index rose 1.3% after it was reported that industrial production rose 2.6% in November versus the 2.5% estimate, despite a bigger drop in large retailer sales than expected at -9.6%. The Japanese government said on Dec. 25 that its 7.2 trillion yen ($78.8 billion) stimulus package unveiled earlier this month would probably boost GDP by 0.7% in 2010 and create about 200,000 jobs.
In China, the estimate of 2008 GDP was upwardly adjusted to 9.6% from 9.0% and the government said this year's previously reported quarterly figures will also increase. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao reiterated the desire to cool property prices, saying that "property prices have risen too quickly in some areas and we should use taxes and loan interest rates to stabilize them," while maintaining a "moderately loose" monetary policy and a "proactive" fiscal stance, saying it would be a mistake to withdraw stimulus too quickly. Wen added that China will "absolutely not yield" to calls to allow the yuan to appreciate, saying that "Keeping the yuan's value basically steady is our contribution to the international community at a time when the world's major currencies have been devalued." Wen also addressed bank lending, saying "it would be good if our bank lending was more balanced, better structured and not on such a large scale," but that the situation "has been improving in the second half of this year."
Despite the property comments, shares of Chinese property stocks rose, and the Shanghai Composite increased 1.5%. Prices of property were also on the mind of investors in Hong Kong, after the city's government sold two sites at prices below market expectations, and the Hang Seng Index was the only major equity benchmark in Asia to decline, falling 0.2%, while South Korea's Kospi Index increased 0.2% and the Australian market was closed. In equity news, China Mobile (CHL $45) erased early losses and gained 0.3% despite a report that the company's Vice Chairman was being investigated by the government in connection with an unspecified "serious disciplinary breach."
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