Hong Kong, Japan stocks down as Asia-Pacific markets tumble following volatility on Wall Street

SINGAPORE — Japan and Hong Kong stocks dropped as much as 2% as Asia-Pacific markets tumbled on Tuesday after a volatile session overnight on Wall Street.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell nearly 2% as auto and tech stocks were largely down, and the Topix fell 1.83%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index lost 2% before recovering slightly to decline 1.42%.

The ASX 200 pared some losses after falling nearly 3% as banks, miners and oil stocks all tumbled across the board. Bank stocks such as ANZ lost nearly 4%, while Commonwealth Bank of Australia and National Australia Bank fell around 3%. Oil stocks dived as Santos fell 5.17%, Beach Energy dived 7.6% and Woodwide Petroleum fell 4.74%.

Inflation in Australia rose 1.3% in the fourth quarter, and 3.5% for the year, the Australian Bureau of Statistics said. Prices increased at its fastest annual pace since 2014, Reuters reported.

In South Korea, the Kospi also declined around 2.53%.

Mainland Chinese stocks were lower as well. The Shanghai Composite lost nearly 1%, and the Shenzhen Component was down 1.17%%.

South Korea’s economy grew 1.1% in the fourth quarter of 2021 compared to the previous quarter, the Bank of Korea said in a press release on Tuesday. For the full year, the country’s GDP expanded by 4% in 2021, the fastest in 11 years, according to Reuters.

Meanwhile, Singapore’s central bank tightened monetary policy on Tuesday in response to rising prices as global demand recovers and supply-side disruptions persist.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore uses the exchange rate to manage policy and said it would raise the rate of appreciation of its policy band slightly.

The Singapore dollar strengthened against the U.S. dollar to trade at 1.3436, while the Straits Times Index was down 1.1%.

On the earnings front, Hyundai Motors is slated to report fourth-quarter results.

U.S. volatility

U.S. markets were volatile on Monday. Stocks sold off earlier in the session but mounted a dramatic comeback as investors stepped in to buy beaten-up tech shares.

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