Asia markets mixed as investors weigh in on earnings

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Asia markets mixed as investors weigh in on earnings

Asian markets were mixed Thursday as investors weighed more positive earnings against ongoing concerns about inflation and central bank tapering, while Hong Kong dropped along with Evergrande after the property giant resumed trading.

Surging global prices have sent shivers through trading floors for much of this year as central banks have been forced to tighten their ultra-loose, pandemic-era monetary policies, but a string of broadly on-target or forecast-beating corporate reports have provided a much-needed salve.

The Dow and S&P 500 closed within spitting distance of record highs after the latest results, while dealers brushed off a Federal Reserve summary of the economy that said transport constraints and shortage of goods had led to significantly elevated prices in most areas of the United States, slowing growth.

The advances filtered through to most of Asia in the morning, but some markets were unable to maintain momentum. Sydney, Wellington, Taipei, Manila and Bangkok eked out minor gains.

But Hong Kong, Tokyo, Singapore, Seoul, Mumbai and Jakarta all fell into the red with the news about China Evergrande casting a pall over proceedings.

The property giant resumed trading after a more than two-week suspension to say the planned sale of its property services arm collapsed.

It also warned it could not guarantee it would meet its debt obligations, days before a 30 day grace period on an offshore bond ends at the weekend, raising expectations it will default and spark a massive restructuring.

Shares in the embattled company tanked more than 13 percent in the afternoon and Justin Tang, of United First Partners, warned that without the infusion of cash from the sale of assets, the firm's share price is going to take the elevator down There had been hope that the $2.58 billion sale of a 50.1 percent stake in Evergrande Property Services Group would provide it with much-needed capital to service its debts.

Shares in the services arm rose more than four percent, while Hopson Development - the firm that had been in the buy-out talks - fell more than five percent.

The news will again raise concerns about the impact on the wider economy, with the property sector accounting for a huge chunk of China's gross domestic product and several other developers failing to meet debt payment deadlines.

Data this week showed that the country's economic growth was slower than expected in the third quarter.

Still, top officials at the People's Bank of China and regulators have insisted the fallout from the crisis could be contained.

Despite the news, mainland Chinese property firms rose, while Hong Kong-listed markets were also up.

Bitcoin was around $65,000, having broken Wednesday to a new record high of $66,976 after a financial instrument dedicated to the unit made a successful debut on the New York Stock Exchange.

The digital unit has surged more than 50 percent over the past month and an eye-watering 450 percent over the past year, and analysts are now whispering the possibility it could hit $100,000 soon.

Euro pound: UP at 84.28 pence from 84.26 pence.

West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 0.4 percent at $83.06 per barrel.

Brent North Sea crude: DOWN 0.7 percent at $85.24 per barrel.

New York - Dow: UP 0.4 percent at 35,609.