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Asian markets mixed as investors track trade talks, shutdown

Hong Kong - Asian investors trod cautiously Thursday as they try to ascertain the state of play in the China-US trade row, while the pound edged higher on growing optimism Britain will not crash out of the European Union.

The long-running US government shutdown continued to rankle, with Democrats and Donald Trump digging their heels in over the president's border wall budget demand, while a White House official warned it could hammer the world's top economy.

For a second day equities swung to and fro, with few solid catalysts to drive trade, though Wall Street provided a positive lead as all three main indexes ended higher following upbeat earnings from the likes of market titans Procter & Gamble and IBM.

In early trade Hong Kong was down 0.1% and Shanghai slipped 0.3% while Tokyo ended the morning 0.4% lower.

Sydney was 0.1% off and Seoul edged up 0.2% while Singapore added 0.3% and Wellington eased 0.1%. Taipei, Manila and Jakarta edged up.

Trump on Wednesday gave an upbeat assessment of the state of affairs in the trade stand-off, saying "we're doing very well in the negotiations" and that China "wants to make a deal".

However, dealers will take the remarks in their stride in a week that has seen the White House deny Financial Times and CNBC reports that officials had rejected Beijing's offer of preparatory discussions ahead of next's high-level talks in Washington.

Earlier Bloomberg said the two sides were struggling to see eye to eye on the delicate issue of intellectual property.

'Very close to zero' 

The talks come as China struggles to reinvigorate its economy, which is growing at its weakest pace in almost three decades, while Trump is face an increasingly bitter government shutdown just as the presidential campaign season gets into gear.

The impact of the shutdown - with Democrats refusing to provide Trump billions for his Mexico border wall - was laid out by the head of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, who warned the economy could grow "very close to zero" if it continued through March.

But Kevin Hassett said there would likely be a massive rebound as soon as the stand-off ended.

There seems no end in sight, with Trump hitting out at House Speaker Nancy Pelosi after she disinvited him from the chamber for his upcoming State of the Union speech citing security worries while parts of the government are not working.

The pound edged up and is holding at two-month highs against the dollar, supported by a belief that Britain will not exit the EU without a deal, despite Prime Minister Theresa May's controversial agreement being soundly defeated by MPs last week.

Traders are increasingly "convinced that the 'worst' that might happen on Brexit is that May's previously doomed Withdrawal Agreement might actually get over the line if the 'hard Brexiteers' in her government become convinced that the alternative is a (delay in leaving), a second referendum and potentially no Brexit", said National Australia Bank Ray Attrill.

Key figures around 02:30 GMT 

Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 0.4% at 20 506.81 (break)

Hong Kong - Hang Seng: DOWN 0.1% at 26 970.89

Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 0.3% at 2 574.38

Pound/dollar: UP at $1.3088 from $1.3068

Euro/dollar: UP at $1.1389 from $1.1383 at 22:00 GMT

Dollar/yen: DOWN at 109.55 yen from 109.60

Oil - West Texas Intermediate: DOWN seven cents at $52.55 per barrel

Oil - Brent Crude: DOWN four cents at $61.10 per barrel

New York - DOW: UP 0.7% at 24 575.62 (close)

London - FTSE 100: DOWN 0.9% at 6 842.88 (close)


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