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Asia stocks up in New Year trade

Hong Kong - Asian markets started 2015 on an upswing in limited trading on Friday, with mainland Chinese stocks surging in Hong Kong on speculation Beijing may ease monetary policy to boost slowing growth.

Hong Kong rose 1.07%, closing 252.78 points higher at 23857.82.

Seoul closed up 0.57%, rising 10.85 points to 1 926.44, while Sydney gained 0.46%, or 24.89 points, to close at 5 435.9.

Singapore edged up 0.19%, gaining 6.39 points to 3 371.54.

Markets in mainland China, Japan, Taiwan, New Zealand, the Philippines, and Thailand remained closed for holidays.

With mainland bourses shut until January 5, shares in Chinese developers and financial companies surged in Hong Kong, stoked by hopes that Beijing could ease monetary policy to support lagging growth in the world's second-largest economy.

China Vanke, the country's biggest developer by sales, leapt 10.8% and the People's Insurance Company (Group) of China was up 5.51% in afternoon trading.

Train-builders CSR  and China CNR Corp. soared - CSR by 16.% and China CNR by 16.0% - extending gains on December 31 after they announced a merger agreement.

China's manufacturing growth dropped in December to its lowest level of 2014, an official survey showed on Thursday, as the sector struggles with weak domestic demand.

China's official Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) came in at 50.1 last month, down from 50.3 recorded in November.

The index, which tracks activity in factories and workshops, is considered a key indicator of the health of China's economy, a major driver of global growth. A figure above 50 signals expansion, while anything below indicates contraction.

"Growth momentum is still insufficient," NBS said in a statement.

Investors eye US factory data

On forex markets the dollar extended gains ahead of the release of American factory data due later on Friday and following a steady stream of good news from the world's biggest economy.

The dollar bought 120.44 yen, compared to 119.44 yen in final 2014 trading on Wednesday.

Wall Street toasted a banner year in 2014, with US equity markets finishing near all-time highs.

The euro meanwhile slipped amid growing expectations that the European Central Bank, which meets on January 22, will start buying sovereign bonds. The single currency bought $1.2061 compared to $1.2160 in pre-holiday trade.

The ECB has already used several tools to push inflation in member nations back up to the 2% annual rate it regards as healthy, including asset purchases and making cheap loans available to banks.

It is also examining the possibility of large-scale purchases of sovereign debt - so-called quantitative easing (QE) - to help jump-start the European Union's moribund economy.

Oil prices rose on Friday, with US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for February delivery rising 44 cents to $54.07 and Brent crude for February gaining 18 cents to $57.51.

"The gains in Asian trading are likely because of the positive US crude stockpiles data released on Wednesday," Daniel Ang, investment analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore, told AFP.

US crude reserves fell by 1.8 million barrels in the week to December 26, the US Energy Information Administration said in its last petroleum report for 2014 released on Wednesday, boosting prices that lost nearly half their value in the second half of the year.

There is growing speculation that the slide in global oil prices - the biggest since the financial crisis in 2008 - may have been excessive.

"If we do see some supply-side responses, or even if they're anticipated over the course of this first quarter of the year, we might find that oil has in fact bottomed," Michael McCarthy, a chief strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney, told Bloomberg.

Gold was at $1 182.36 an ounce, compared with $1 199.00 in end-of-year trading on Wednesday.

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