Hong Kong - Major Asian markets were mostly lower on Monday after lower-than-expected US jobs growth sounded a warning about the recovery of the world's biggest economy.
Investors failed to follow Wall Street, which closed last week on record highs despite the job figures indicating that growth remains sluggish.
Tokyo fell 1.44% 208.12 points to close at 14 258.04, Seoul dropped 0.37% or 7.16 points to 1 916.22, and Sydney fell 0.11% or 5.5 points to 5 111.3.
In the afternoon Hong Kong was up 0.17% and Shanghai rose 0.36%.
Markets in the region were digesting Friday's Labor Department figures, which showed the United States added just 162 000 jobs in July, well below the 175 000 increase expected by analysts.
The unemployment rate fell to 7.4% from 7.6% in June.
The data will serve as an indicator of when the Federal Reserve may rein in its bond-buying programme, with sluggish growth suggesting any scaling back of the massive stimulus scheme will be delayed.
Despite the disappointing figures leading to an initial dip, Wall Street saw a late surge to end the week at a record high, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average closing up 0.19% or 30.34 points at 15 658.36. The broad-market S&P 500 ended up 0.16% or 2.80 points at 1 709.67.
The release at the weekend of a slightly improved Chinese non-manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) failed to give Asian stocks a boost.
China's official non-manufacturing PMI for July came in at 54.1, up from 53.9 in the previous month. A reading below 50 indicates contraction, while anything above signals growth.
Banking giant HSBC said Monday its PMI for the services industry in China stood at 51.3 in July, unchanged from June.
The dollar fetched ¥98.76 in afternoon Asian trade, almost flat from ¥98.89 in New York Friday, but sharply down from around ¥99.50 in Tokyo Friday.
The euro bought $1.3274 and ¥131.11 Monday against $1.3279 and ¥131.35 in US trade.
Hiroichi Nishi, general manager of equities at SMBC Nikko Securities, said there was "some caution over stocks having risen too sharply" in previous sessions.
Still, "falls are likely to be limited as uncertainty has broadly receded over the global economic outlook in recent weeks", he added.
Oil prices turned higher Monday, with New York's main contract, West Texas Intermediate for delivery in September, gaining 30 cents to $107.24 a barrel in afternoon trade. Brent North Sea crude for September rose 25 cents to $109.20.
"The HSBC purchasing managers' index for the services industry in China remains in an expansionary region, and this has provided support for crude prices," Lee Chen Hoay, investment analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore, told AFP.
Gold cost $1 314.20 at 08:55, compared with $1 289.00 late Friday.
In other markets:
-- Taipei rose 0.48%, or 38.75 points, to 8 138.63.
MediaTek shed 1.24% to Tw$358.5 while HTC was 7% up at Tw$153.
-- Wellington climbed 0.14%, or 6.59 points, to 4 589.49.
Fletcher Building gained 1.55% to NZ$8.54 and Fonterra Shareholders' Fund slipped 3.65% to NZ$6.86.