Hong Kong - Asian markets edged lower in holiday-hit trade on Monday, reversing earlier gains that were fuelled by upbeat US and Chinese manufacturing data as well as strong US auto sales.
The euro made a small gain after suffering selling pressure last week on expectations the European Central Bank (ECB) will cut interest rates at its next meeting Thursday.
Sydney slipped 0.38%, or 20.6 points, to close at 5 390.5 and Seoul fell 0.70%, or 14.25 points to 2 025.17. Shanghai closed flat, dipping 0.07 points to 2 149.63 and Hong Kong gave up 0.26%, or 60.17 points, to 23 189.62.
Tokyo and Mumbai were closed for public holidays.
US shares finished on a high Friday after figures showed manufacturing activity grew faster than expected in October. That came hours after China said its own purchasing managers' index (PMI) came in at its highest level for 18 months.
News that October auto sales from the three largest US manufacturers - Chrysler, Ford and General Motors - saw double-digit percentage gains supported Wall Street Friday. The Dow added 0.45%, the S&P 500 tacked on 0.29% and the Nasdaq was flat.
Over the weekend data showed signs of growth in China's services sector, as the official non-manufacturing PMI recorded its strongest reading in 14 months.
In China, attention is turning to a Communist Party policy meeting due to start Saturday, with traders looking for possible economic reforms.
Also, Washington will release third-quarter gross domestic product advanced estimates on Thursday and official October non-farm payrolls figures Friday.
On currency markets the euro ticked up slightly after tumbling last week on expectations the ECB would cut interest rates, after figures showed inflation in the region at a four-year low.
The euro bought $1.3492, compared with $1.3482 in New York but well down from $1.3750 on Wednesday. It was at ¥133.09 against ¥133.10 in New York.
"The eurozone has seen poor results in recent months, and there are serious concerns that the inflation rate has gone too low," Desmond Chua, market analyst at CMC Markets in Singapore, told AFP.
"Investors will be watching if the ECB president Mario Draghi will indicate further monetary easing in the eurozone, with a new long-term refinancing option a viable option," he said.
The dollar was at 98.65 yen from 98.69 yen in New York. The greenback is being buoyed by speculation the Federal Reserve will begin winding down its stimulus programme next month after it gave an upbeat assessment of the US economy last week.
In oil trade New York's main contract West Texas Intermediate for December delivery rose 14 cents to $94.75 a barrel in afternoon trade. Brent North Sea crude for December climbed 44 cents to $106.35.
Gold dropped to $1 313.60 at 12:00 compared with $1 316.15 on Friday.
In other markets:
-- Singapore closed up 0.09%, or 2.74 points, at 3,203.94.
Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation rose 0.97% to Sg$10.46 while agribusiness company Wilmar International eased 1.45% to Sg$3.40.
-- Bangkok lost 2.85%, or 40.68 points, to 1 388.40.
Coal producer Banpu fell 4.46% to 26.75, while Bangkok Bank lost 2.88% to 202.00 baht.
-- Kuala Lumpur slipped 0.16%, or 2.94 points, to 1 807.47.
SapuraKencana Petroleum shed 1.9% to 4.09 ringgit, while YTL Corp. eased 1.8% to 1.61. Genting Malaysia led gainers to rise 2.3% to 4.47 ringgit.
-- Jakarta slipped 0.21%, or 9.30 points, to 4 423.29.
State miner Aneka Tambang fell 1.29% to 1,530 rupiah, while telecommunications company Telekomunikasi Indonesia jumped 1.09% to 2 325 rupiah.
-- Taipei fell 0.41%, or 34.04 points, to 8 354.14.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. was 0.46% lower at Tw$109.0 while chip design house MediaTek was up by its 7.0% daily limit at Tw$432.5.
-- Wellington was flat, edging down 3.16 points to 4 910.68.
Fletcher Building fell 2.34% to NZ$9.60, Air New Zealand was off 0.57% at NZ$3.52 and telecoms firm Chorus climbed 0.38% at NZ$2.63.
-- Manila closed 0.64% lower, giving up 41.99 points to 6 543.39.
Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co fell 1.60% to 2 824 pesos.