The Taiwan stock market has finished higher in two of three trading days since the end of the three-day losing streak in which it had fallen more than 165 points or 2.3 percent. The Taiwan Stock Exchange finished just below the 7,150-point plateau, and now traders are looking for further upside when the market kicks off trade on Friday.
The global forecast for the Asian markets is positive thanks to upbeat earnings news, although soft economic data limited the upside. Tech stocks again figure to provide a lift as IBM Corp. (IBM) and online auctioneer eBay (EBAY) both posted better than expected Q2 results. Limiting the upside, the U.S. Labor Department reported a bigger than expected increase in weekly jobless claims. The European and U.S. markets finished higher and the Asian bourses are expected to open in similar fashion.
The TSE finished sharply higher on Thursday following upside from the technology, plastic, cement, finance, construction, paper, food and textile stocks.
For the day, the index spiked 99.52 points or 1.41 percent to finish at 7,148.57 after trading between 7,098.18 and 7,163.75 on turnover of 60.91 billion Taiwan dollars.
Among the gainers, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. surged 3.61 percent, while United Microelectronics Corp. jumped 2.88 percent and Acer added 0.36 percent.
The lead from Wall Street remains upbeat as notable strength was visible on Thursday, with technology stocks adding to the substantial gains posted in the previous session thanks to solid earnings news. Disappointing economic data limited the upside, but stocks still extended their recent upward move.
IBM Corp. (IBM) saw notable strength, with the tech giant advancing 3.8 percent after reporting better than expected Q2 earnings growth. The company's revenues fell short of estimates, but IBM also raised its full-year earnings guidance.
Online auctioneer eBay (EBAY) also posted a strong gain after reporting better than expected second quarter results. Shares of eBay surged up by 8.6 percent. Nokia (NOK) and Qualcomm (QCOM) also saw significant strength on the day following the release of their quarterly results.
Buying interest remained subdued following the release of disappointing economic data, including a Labor Department report showing a bigger than expected increase in weekly jobless claims - which jumped to 386,000 in the week ended July 14 from the previous week's revised figure of 352,000. Economists had expected 365,000 from the 350,000 originally reported.
A separate report from the National Association of Realtors showed an unexpected drop in existing home sales in June as sales fell 5.4 percent to an annual rate of 4.37 million in June from an upwardly revised 4.62 million in May. Economists had expected sales to climb to 4.65 million from the 4.55 million originally reported for the previous month.
The Philadelphia Federal Reserve also released a report showing continued weakness in regional manufacturing activity, while a Conference Board saw a bigger than expected drop in its leading economic indicators index.
The major U.S. averages closed firmly higher on Thursday as the NASDAQ advanced 23.30 points or 0.8 percent to finish at 2,965.90, while the Dow rose 34.66 points or 0.3 percent to end at 12,943.36 and the S&P 500 climbed 3.73 points or 0.3 percent to 1,376.51.
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