Asian Stocks Mixed on Conflicting U.S. Economic Data
By wchung | 23 Mar, 2026
Asian stock markets were mixed in early trading Monday as a disappointing U.S. jobs report sparked worries that a recovery in the world’s largest economy is losing steam.
Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 stock index added 34.30 points, or 0.4 percent, to 9,238.01 in the morning session.
South Korea’s Kospi increased 2.52 points, or 0.2 percent, to 1,674.34, and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was up 0.2 percent at 4,274.00.
Elsewhere, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 0.5 percent to 19,809.06 and the Shanghai Composite Index declined 1.2 percent at 2,353.43. Markets in Taiwan and New Zealand edged up in early trading.
Most investors stayed on the sidelines in Asia as the U.S. financial markets are closed Monday due to a public holiday.
Investors in Asia were also reluctant to chase gains after the Dow Jones industrial average fell 46.05 points, or 0.5 percent, to 9,686.48 Friday, the seventh-straight day of decline.
It was also the longest losing streak since the height of the financial crisis in October 2008. Sentiment turned downbeat on Wall Street after the U.S. government said Friday private employers added only 83,000 jobs last month, fewer than the 112,000 analysts had forecast.
In currencies, the dollar rose to 87.80 yen from 87.70 yen in New York late Friday. The euro declined to $1.2530 from $1.2556.
Benchmark crude for August delivery lost 81 cents to settle at $72.14 a barrel Friday on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
TOKYO (AP)
Articles
- How Charles and Sara Liang Survived Scandals to Build a $20-Billion AI Giant
- SpaceX, Tesla to Build AI Chip Factories in Austin
- The Mensch Way for Don to Smooth Over His Iran Bad
- Elon Musk Offers to Pay TSA Salaries During Partial Shutdown
- Tencent Debuts ClawBot to Take on Agentic AI from Alibaba, Baidu
- China Pledges More Balanced Trade After Record $1.2 Trillion Surplus
- Airports Step up to Feed Unpaid TSA Workers
- Don Struggles for a Face-Saving Exit from a Self-Created Nightmare
- OpenAI to Double Workforce to 8,000 by End of 2026
- BTS Comeback Concert Shuts Down Central Seoul
