Stock

Taiwan stocks higher at close of trade; Taiwan Weighted up 0.07%

Investing.com – Taiwan stocks were higher after the close on Wednesday, as gains in the Electronic Products Distribution, Machinery and Rubber sectors led shares higher.

At the close in Taiwan, the Taiwan Weighted rose 0.07%.

The best performers of the session on the Taiwan Weighted were Episil-Precision Inc (TW:3016), which rose 10.00% or 4.50 points to trade at 49.50 at the close. Meanwhile, Taiwan Chelic Corp Ltd (TW:4555) added 9.98% or 4.15 points to end at 45.75 and Altek Corp (TW:3059) was up 9.97% or 3.60 points to 39.70 in late trade.

The worst performers of the session were ALi Corp (TW:3041), which fell 6.29% or 2.35 points to trade at 35.00 at the close. Powertech Industrial Co Ltd (TW:3296) declined 5.75% or 1.85 points to end at 30.30 and Tai Twun Enterprise Co Ltd (TW:3432) was down 5.71% or 1.05 points to 17.35.

Falling stocks outnumbered advancing ones on the Taiwan Stock Exchange by 0 to 0.

Crude oil for February delivery was down 0.09% or 0.06 to $70.10 a barrel. Elsewhere in commodities trading, Brent oil for delivery in March rose 1.24% or 0.90 to hit $73.22 a barrel, while the February Gold Futures contract unchanged 0.00% or 0.00 to trade at $2,633.50 a troy ounce.

USD/TWD was up 0.03% to 32.70, while TWD/CNY unchanged 0.00% to 0.22.

The US Dollar Index Futures was up 0.18% at 108.00.

This post appeared first on investing.com

Related posts
Stock

China Vanke’s CEO, chairman resign amid growing liquidity worries

(Reuters) – Property developer China Vanke said on Monday its chairman Yu Liang and CEO Zhu Jiusheng had resigned, amid growing concerns…
Stock

Italy’s MPS shares fall ahead of Mediobanca board meeting on bid

By Giulia Segreti and Valentina Za ROME/MILAN (Reuters) – Shares in Monte dei Paschi (MPS) fell again on Monday, extending Friday’s losses,…
Stock

Fuji Media, rocked by sexual misconduct allegations, says executives to resign

By Rocky Swift TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s Fuji Media said on Monday its chairman and the head of its TV unit would step…