Asian markets advanced moderately on Tuesday. The Kospi climbed .8% to 1956, the Hang Seng rallied 1.1%, and the Shanghai Composite added .3% to 2293. Lagging behind, the Nikkei inched up .1% to 8803, while the ASX 200 slipped .2%.
European markets gained as well, despite weaker than expected data from the US. The CAC40 posted a solid 1% gain, while the DAX and FTSE rose a modest .2%. Hopes lingered on for a Greek debt deal, while pressure mounted on the heavily-indebted country to undertake steep spending cuts.
US stocks closed little changed, overcoming earlier losses. The Dow slipped 21 points to 12634, the S&P 500 closed flat at 1312, and the Nasdaq gained 2 points to 2814. Nonetheless, January was an extremely strong month for stocks, as the Dow climbed 3.4%, the S&P 500 advanced 4.4%, and the Nasdaq soared 8%.
RadioShack tumbled 30% after issuing a profit warning, dropping to a 3-year low. Mattel advanced 5% on strong earnings, while UPS slipped .7% despite exceeding analyst forecasts.
Currencies
The Dollar was mixed as US growth concerns weighed against European debt troubles. The Euro ticked down .4% to 1.3080, and the Swiss Franc shed .3% to 1.0864. The Pound and Australian Dollar both gained .3% to 1.5760 and 1.0617 respectively, and the Yen rose .2% to 76.22.
Economic Outlook
Tuesday’s sobering economic data reawakened doubts over the pace of the US economic recovery. The Case Shiller home price index fell by 3.7%, significantly worse than last month’s 3.4% drop. Chicago PMI dropped to 60.2 from 62.5. Consumer confidence slumped to 61.1 from 64.8, whereas analysts had expected an increase to 68.2.
Wednesday’s busy economic calendar will include the ADP employment report, the Challenger job-cut report, the ISM manufacturing index, construction spending, auto sales, and weekly oil inventories.