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Asia stocks take breather, oil passes $50 a barrel

Hong Kong - Asia stocks took a breather on Thursday after a rally during the previous session, but energy firms were mostly up after oil surged past $50 a barrel for the first time this year.

Investors seemed to brush off another strong lead from Wall Street and Europe, treading softly as the Group of Seven leaders' summit kicked off in Japan, where the sputtering global economy is likely to top the agenda.

Markets had rallied around the world on Wednesday as investors welcomed a debt relief deal for Greece, bright German data, easing concerns of a Brexit and firmer oil prices.

Traders were also beginning to adjust to news of a possible US interest rate hike come June or July, analysts said, viewing it as an indication of economic strength.

But on Thursday morning Hong Kong was down 0.3% after surging by 2.7% during the previous session, while Shanghai dropped 0.9%

Sydney, Seoul and Taipei were all flat, but Tokyo was up 0.3% by the break and Manila tumbled 1.3%.

Energy firms again saw some of the biggest gains after oil passed $50 a barrel in Asia for the first time in months on the back of data overnight that showed a fall in US crude inventories, adding to expectations of a tightening global market.

In its weekly report, the Department of Energy said that US commercial crude oil inventories fell by 4.2 million barrels in the week to May 20.

"The immediate driver is a good draw on US crude stockpiles, helping to nudge the price up a bit further," Ric Spooner, a chief analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney, told Bloomberg News.

"The market hasn't had any bad news to knock it off its perch but the price is likely to struggle if it gets into the $50s. There is still quite a bit of inventory around."

G7 summit kicks off in Japan

At around 03:30 GMT, Brent North Sea crude for July delivery was up 33 cents at $50.07 a barrel while US benchmark West Texas Intermediate was trading 29C higher at $49.85.

In Sydney, WorleyParsons soared 7.1% and BHP Billiton was 2.4% higher, while in Hong Kong, CNOOC added 2.2% and Sinopec increased nearly 1%.

Tokyo-listed Inpex also jumped more than 3% and JX Holdings advanced 1.6%.

Also in Japan, world leaders began two days of G7 talks, with heads of state and government from the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and host Japan all present.

Markets will no doubt be eyeing the talks for further trading cues as leaders discuss the global economy, with divisions likely to remain over whether the world should spend or save its way out of its current malaise, with Japan and Germany at odds over the issue.

China, the world's second largest economy, will not be present but looks set to loom large over discussions.

Elsewhere, New Zealand on Thursday said its budget was back in the black but warned a British exit from the European Union could derail the strong economic performance Wellington expects over the next few years.

"The possibility of Britain exiting the European Union may lead to high volatility in global markets," the papers said, adding this "would weigh on demand and inflation in New Zealand".


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