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Japan’s Nikkei leads Asian stocks higher; China, Fed fears limit gains

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Investing.com– Most Asian stock markets rose on Friday and were headed for a positive week amid optimism over raising the U.S. debt ceiling, although concerns over a slowing economic recovery in China and a hawkish Federal Reserve kept gains limited. 

Japan’s index outpaced its peers for a fifth straight session, rising 1% to its highest level since the 1990’s “bubble era.” The broader added 0.5%, and was at record highs.

The rally was powered by a mix of strong corporate earnings, resilience in the Japanese economy and bets that the Bank of Japan will maintain its ultra-loose monetary policy.

This saw traders largely look past data on Friday that showed rose in April, moving back towards 40-year highs and potentially heralding more pressure on the Japanese economy.

Broader Asian markets advanced on Friday, tracking gains in Wall Street amid growing optimism that policymakers were close to reaching a deal to raise the U.S. debt ceiling and avoid a default.

South Korea’s added 0.8%, while the index rose 0.4%. Australia’s index also added 0.7%, amid growing bets that the Reserve Bank will hold interest rates steady in June. 

But broader gains were held back by concerns over a slowing post-COVID economic recovery in China, following a string of weaker-than-expected readings this week. Sluggish readings for April suggest a difficult second quarter for the Chinese economy, despite a strong start to the year.

China’s and indexes were flat after lagging their peers all week, while Hong Kong’s slid 1%.

The Hang Seng was also pressured by losses in e-commerce giant Alibaba (NYSE:) Group, which tumbled 5.3% after its first quarter revenue missed estimates. The group is facing slowing demand in China as the country’s digital markets mature and as it faces increased competition from other players.

Chinese consumer spending remained below consensus despite rebounding sharply from COVID-era lows, as consumers stayed wary of bigger purchases amid weak economic conditions.

Hawkish signals from U.S. Federal Reserve officials also rattled markets, as more policymakers warned that sticky inflation could keep rates higher for longer, and potentially attract more hikes.

Their warnings came ahead of a panel discussion with due later in the day, which is set to provide more cues on monetary policy. 

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