Asian indexes mixed in choppy trading, echoing Wall Street
FILE - The New York Stock Exchange is seen in New York on Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022. Stocks are edging mostly higher in early trading on Wall Street Wednesday, April 20, with the notable exception of Netflix, which lost nearly a third of its value after reporting its first subscriber loss in more than a decade and predicting more grim times ahead. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File) · Associated Press · ASSOCIATED PRESS

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TOKYO (AP) — Asian shares were mixed in choppy trading Thursday, as inflation worries and the war in Ukraine had investors partly optimistic while staying cautious.

Benchmarks rose in Japan, South Korea and Australia, boosted by the overnight rally in Europe and in the Dow in the U.S. Investors were also watching South Korean trade numbers for April, which showed a trade deficit, although both imports and exports rose.

Chinese President Xi Jinping was speaking at a forum where Asian leaders talk about policy. Investors are watching to see if Xi will give any hint on changes to China's COVID policies, according to Iris Pang, chief economist at ING.

What central banks may indicate on interest rates and inflation was also of concern, analysts said.

“Market focus will remain on inflation and the Ukraine-Russia situation ” ahead of the Thursday IMF panel discussion with U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde, said Lavanya Venkateswaran of Mizuho Bank in Singapore.

Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 jumped 1.3% in morning trading to 27,559.57. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 added 0.3% to 7,589.60. South Korea's Kospi surged 0.6% to 2,735.37. Hong Kong's Hang Seng slipped 0.7% to 20,801.65, while the Shanghai Composite fell 0.5% to 3,134.45.

Wall Street's major stock indexes ended mixed on a day dominated by the drop in Netflix shares, which lost more than a third of their value after reporting its first subscriber loss in more than a decade and predicting more grim times ahead.

The S&P 500 slipped 0.1% after a late-afternoon fade, while the Nasdaq fell 1.2%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.7%, having received a bump from IBM, which added 7.1% after reporting quarterly results that beat analysts’ estimates.

Netflix slumped 35.1% a day after the streaming giant reported its first decline in subscribers in more than a decade. The company also said it expects a steeper decline during the current quarter. Netflix is now considering changes that it has long resisted, including minimizing password sharing and creating a low-cost subscription option supported by advertising. The stock is now down 67% from the all-time high it reached in November.

The skid in Netflix, one of Wall Street's Big Tech high-flyers in recent years, weighed heavily on the S&P 500, outweighing gains elsewhere in the benchmark index, and hit the communication services sector the hardest, pulling it 4.1% lower.

“While it is in communication services, it is also a discretionary stock, clearly, in that it's one of those things people buy because they want, not because they have to,” said Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivatives at Charles Schwab.