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Asian markets rise, China inflation dips

Hong Kong - Asian markets rose on Wednesday, with bargain hunters providing some lift after recent losses while data showing Chinese inflation at a five-year low raised hopes for fresh economy-boosting measures from Beijing.

US stocks came off a three-day sell-down to provide a positive lead thanks to some solid earnings reports, while the euro continued to struggle following another batch of soft German data.

Tokyo rallied 0.92% after five days of losses and helped by a weaker yen, with the Nikkei adding 137.01 points to 15 073.52.

Sydney gained 38.2 points to close at 5 245.6 with mining companies leading the charge on the back of stronger commodity prices.

Shanghai reversed initial losses to end 0.60% higher, adding 14.20% to 2 373.67 while Hong Kong climbed 92.08 points to 23 140.05.

Seoul lost 3.34 points to close at 1 925.91 as the Bank of Korea cut interest rates for the second time in three months and lowered its 2014 growth estimate for the country's economy.

A slew of weak figures out of China, Japan and the eurozone have fanned worries about the global outlook and sent investors running for the door in recent weeks, despite the US economy showing healthy growth.

On Wednesday, Beijing said inflation in September eased to 1.6% - its lowest since January 2010 - from 2.0% in August, indicating deflationary risks are rising in the world's number two economy.

The government also said the producer price index (PPI) - a measure of costs for goods at the factory gate and a leading indicator of the trend for CPI - fell 1.8% year-on-year. The last PPI increase was in January 2012, when it rose 0.7%.

German data knocks confidence

However, while the report is the latest suggesting problems in the Chinese economy, traders bet it will put pressure on the government to act to boost the economy.

"As China's deflation risk rises, policy makers should take pre-emptive measures to reduce interest rates in the real economy," HSBC economist Ma Xiaoping said, according to Dow Jones Newswires.

"Deflation is not happening now, but the risk is obviously rising. Policy makers should do more."

Confidence has also been given a knock from disappointing figures out of Germany, including on factory orders, industrial production, and foreign trade. On Tuesday, a closely watched index of investor sentiment fell for the 10th straight month, to its lowest level since November 2012.

The news weighed on the euro, which bought $1.2657 in Tokyo, against $1.2659 in New York and well down from the $1.2700 earlier on Tuesday in Asia. However, it rose to ¥135.72 from ¥135.62.

The dollar was at ¥107.20, up from ¥107.13 in New York.

New York's three main indexes ended broadly higher following sold earnings from the likes of Citigroup, Wells Fargo and Johnson & Johnson.

The S&P 500 gained 0.16% and the Nasdaq climbed 0.32%, but the Dow edged down 0.04%.

World oil prices picked up after plummeting on Tuesday, although they are still down around a fifth from their 2014 highs. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for November delivery was up 20 cents at $82.04 a barrel in mid-morning trade, and Brent crude climbed 31c to $85.35.

Gold was at $1 223.52 an ounce against $1 233.25 late on Tuesday.

In other markets:

- Taipei fell 112.88 points, to 8 655.51. Hon Hai shed 2.6% to Tw$93.5 while Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing rose 0.41% to Tw$121.5.

- Wellington rose 16.98 points to 5 162.87. Fletcher Building was up 1.4% at NZ$8.69 and Trade Me added 0.56% to NZ$3.60.

- Manila closed 0.65% higher, adding 45.13 points to 6 991.19. Philippine Long Distance Telephone added 1.72% to 3 074 pesos while Ayala Land rose 2.85% to 32.50 pesos.
 

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