Seoul shares trade lower; techs, financials drag
(Updates to mid-morning)
By Park Jung-youn
SEOUL, July 7 (Reuters) - Seoul shares opened lower on Monday, continuing their longest losing streak in five years, with financials hit by fresh credit worries on bearish brokerage comments and easier oil lending little support to airlines.
The Korea Composite Stock Price Index was down 0.95 percent to 1,562,93 points as of 0105 GMT, heading for its eighth consecutive losing session and about 1.6 percent away from the mid-March low of 1,537.53 points.
"Foreign selling on the back of uncertainties that abound in the market -- namely energy prices, inflation pressure and an economic slowdown -- are continuing to weigh on the index," said Won Jong-hyuk, a market analyst at SK Securities.
"Added to that are anxieties about U.S. banks' earnings set to come out from next week. Earnings expectations for South Korean firms have also been lowered," Won added.
However analysts said that the shares may not fall with the same rapid velocity seen in recent weeks as the index nears its yearly low.
Memory chip makers such as Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) and Hynix Semiconductor (000660.KS) dropped on worsening worries about their outlook as inflationary pressure and slowing economies are set to eat into demand for electronic goods, analysts said.
"On the back of the slowing DRAM chip recovery and falls in NAND Flash prices, investors are doubting earlier views that the chip market will recover from the second half," said Kim Young-june, an analyst at Kyobo Securities.
Samsung Elec came under further pressure on media reports of negative brokerage comments on the world's No.1 memory chip maker by UBS Securities, citing a slowdown in the European market.
Samsung Elec was down 1.95 percent to 604,000 won and Hynix fell 3.21 percent to 22,600 won.
Meanwhile financials lost across the board on fresh credit worries after bearish comments by Goldman Sachs on Friday on the European banking sector.[ID:nBNG188566]
Samsung Securities (016360.KS) tumbled 3.88 percent to 59,500 won and Woori Investment & Securities (005940.KS) was down 1.34 percent to 18,350 won.
Shares in Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) shed 2.92 percent to
69,700 won amid increasingly trying market conditions, analysts
said.
"There are a lot of negatives with little, if at all, positives (for Hyundai). There's talk of implementing measures to curtail driving amid rising energy prices, and oil is showing no signs of stabilising," said Yong Dae-in, an analyst at Hanwha Securities.
"Its employees are talking about walkouts, making the picture even grimmer," Yong added.
Retreating oil prices did little to prop up the share prices
of energy-sensitive issues such as Korean Air Line (003490.KS),
which hit a 52-week low of 39,350 won on expectations it would
post its largest-ever operating loss in the second quarter.
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