Asian shares mixed following rebound on Wall Street

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Investors monitor share prices at a brokerage house in Beijing, Wednesday, March 27, 2019. Shares were mixed in Asia early Wednesday after U.S. stocks finished broadly higher on Wall Street, erasing modest losses from a day earlier. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Shares were mixed in Asia on Wednesday after U.S. stocks finished broadly higher on Wall Street, erasing modest losses from a day earlier.

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Japan’s Nikkei 225 index fell 0.4 percent to 21,344.93 while the Shanghai Composite added 0.8 percent to 3,020.52. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng added 0.6 percent to 28,748.28, but Australia’s S&P ASX 200 edged 0.1 percent lower to 6,128.40.

China reported a drop in industrial profits in the latest signal of softening growth in the world’s No. 2 economy.

The National Bureau of Statistics reported Wednesday that profits of China’s major industrial firms fell 14 percent from a year earlier in the January-February period.

Weak data from China often support share prices in local markets as investors speculate the government may take fresh measures to prop up growth.

Overnight in U.S. markets, financial, technology and health care stocks surged. Banks got a boost from rising bond yields, which let them charge higher rates on loans.

But homebuilders slumped on new data showing the pace of newly started residential construction projects fell sharply last month.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note edged up to 2.42 percent from 2.41 percent late Monday. However, it’s still below the yield on the three-month Treasury bill, which many see as a warning sign of a possible recession.

The S&P 500 index gained 0.7 percent to 2,818.46. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.6 percent to 25,657.73, while the Nasdaq composite added 0.7 percent, to 7,691.52. The Russell 2000 index of smaller company stocks picked up 1 percent to 1,528.17.

U.S. stocks are on track to finish the quarter with solid gains at the end of this week. The benchmark S&P 500 index is up more than 12 percent so far in 2019, an unusually strong start to a year.

Still, uncertainty remains over how the U.S. and China will resolve their costly trade dispute and how a slowing global economy will affect corporate profits as companies begin to report results for the first quarter next month.

Trade talks are due to resume in Beijing on Thursday.

“The ability to strike an economically viable, mutually agreeable, politically acceptable, and commercially enforceable deal within a reasonably quick time will be put to the test,” Mizuho Bank said in a commentary. “Without obsessing over every minute detail, suffice to say that optimism over the potential for such a trade deal has been challenged by the ability to get both sides on the same page over a whole range of issues.”

ELSEWHERE IN ASIA: South Korea’s Kospi was flat at 2,148.95 and the Sensex in India climbed 0.5 percent to 38,420.03. Shares fell in Taiwan and Indonesia but rose in Singapore and Thailand.

ENERGY: Energy companies have been gaining as the price of U.S. crude oil hovers near $60 per barrel. U.S. benchmark crude added 9 cents to $60.03 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It gained $1.12 Tuesday to $59.94 per barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, picked up 13 cents to $67.56 per barrel.

CURRENCIES: The dollar weakened to 110.60 Japanese yen from 110.63 yen on Tuesday. The euro fell to $1.1260 from $1.1266.

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AP Business Writer Alex Veiga contributed.

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