SenseTime the big winner despite flat Asian trade

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            Hong Kong, :Asian stocks were mostly flat on Thursday in cautious holiday trade following a mixed close on Wall Street, though Chinese artificial intelligence start-up SenseTime was a big winner with a 23 percent jump on its Hong Kong debut.

                  Fears of the Omicron coronavirus variant are still weighing on markets, with the United States hitting its highest-ever average of new Covid cases and the World Health Organization warning that a “tsunami” of infections would push health systems to the brink of collapse.

                  But investors have also clung to data showing a reduced risk of hospitalisation, as well as the reality that trading volumes are extremely low in the period between Christmas and New Year.

                  “Despite global surges in Covid cases, the markets are reflecting the new reality that Covid is here to stay albeit more on our terms than its,” Kevin Philip, managing director at Bel Air Investment Advisors, said in an email.

                  Next year, “we are facing less of a Covid-influenced world, and a return toward normalcy”, he added.

                  Tokyo was marginally down at the close on its last trading day of 2021, but the benchmark Nikkei index rose nearly five percent for the year to its highest annual close since the 1989 boom.

                  Hong Kong and Shanghai were both marginally up.

                  SenseTime was among stocks bucking the trend, with its price well up only a week after it was blacklisted by the United States over accusations of genocide in Xinjiang.

                  The sale boosted the wealth of company co-founder Tang Xiao’ou, with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology alum’s wealth jumping by $500 million to roughly $3.9 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

                  Also in Hong Kong, shares in embattled Chinese property giant Evergrande tumbled 10 percent after a report the group had failed to meet two more offshore payments.

                  But indices were mostly sedate overall.

                  Seoul and Taiwan recorded small dips, while Wellington and Manila were slightly up.

                  “Ahead of year-end and New Year holidays, the number of market participants is low and trade will likely remain lethargic,” Mizuho Securities said.

                  “Asia is having a mixed day… and it appears that some pre-New-Years-Eve book squaring is weighing on some markets,” said Jeffrey Halley, a senior market analyst with OANDA.

                  A day earlier, London’s FTSE 100 outshone other markets, rising 0.7 percent to hit a nearly two-year high as UK traders returned from a long holiday.

                  But the traditional post-Christmas bullish mood waned in Asia and the eurozone, with markets there finishing lower.

                  The picture was also mixed on Wall Street, where the Nasdaq retreated even as both the Dow and S&P 500 edged to fresh records.