Asian Shares Mixed; China, Hong Kong Stocks Surge On AI Optimism

Asian

Asian stocks ended mixed on Friday as tariff worries offset investor optimism over Chinas artificial intelligence potential.

Gold dipped from record highs and the dollar faced a third straight weekly drop while oil headed for a weekly gain on supply jitters.

Chinas Shanghai Composite index gained 0.85 percent to close at 3,379.11 on optimism toward the technology sector.

Also, U.S. President Donald Trumps comments have raised hopes of a de-escalation in the trade war between the worlds two largest economies.

Trump told reporters that a trade deal with China is possible in an interview aboard Air Force One.

Hong Kongs Hang Seng index climbed 3.99 percent to 23,477.92 as tech giant Alibaba reported Q3 revenue and earnings that beat expectations on strong year-end shopping sales.

Alibaba Group shares surged 14.6 percent as chief executive officer said the pursuit of artificial general intelligence is now the companys primary objective.

Japanese markets eked out modest gains as the yen retreated after strengthening to a more than two-month high of 150.52 per U.S. dollar on Thursday amid BoJ rate hike bets.

The Nikkei average rose 0.26 percent to 38,776.94 as Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said the central bank would ramp up government bond buying if long-term interest rates rise sharply. The broader Topix index finished marginally higher at 2,736.53.

Seoul stocks ended little changed, with the Kospi average finishing marginally higher at 2,654.58, recovering from an early slide.

Australian markets ended slightly lower, giving up early gains amid increasing geopolitical tensions.

Data showed Australias unemployment rate rose further in January even as hiring exceeded expectations. Separately, a survey by S&P Global revealed that business activity in Australias private sector rose to a six-month high in February.

The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 slid 0.32 percent to 8,296.20 while the broader All Ordinaries index settled 0.36 percent lower at 8,570.90.

Mayne Pharma Group shares soared 33 percent after U.S. pharma giant Cosette made a $672m bid for the company.

QBE Insurance rallied 3 percent on strong full-year results. Nine Entertainment jumped 20 percent following CoStars $2.7 billion bid for Domain.

Across the Tasman, New Zealands benchmark S&P/NZX-50 index fell 0.99 percent to 12,752.58, marking its fourth consecutive decline and hitting its lowest closing level in two months.

U.S. stocks ended firmly in the red overnight as Walmarts fiscal 2026 guidance missed analyst expectations and big bank stocks fell sharply amid concerns about the outlook for growth, inflation and interest rates.

In economic news, there was a slight increase in jobless claims last week, while manufacturing activity in the Philadelphia region expanded at a much slower pace in February, separate set of data revealed.

The S&P 500 dropped 0.4 percent, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite gave up half a percent and the narrower Dow lost 1 percent.