The survivors told rescuers they had set off from Libya on Sept. 1 and that 21 of the 28 people on board had fallen into the sea in rough weather
Trading was also nervous at the start of a crucial week that will see a Bank of Japan policy meeting, the release of US jobs data and a series of talks in Europe on Greece’s debt.
Tokyo ended flat, dipping 3.72 points to 8,929.34. Sydney closed 0.10 percent, or 4.5 points, higher at 4,476.9 and Seoul was almost unchanged, nudging up 0.09 points to 1,891.52.
Hong Kong closed down 0.16 percent, or 34.52 points, at 21,511.05 with developers dragged down by government plans to curb the red-hot property market.
Shanghai ended 0.35 percent lower, giving up 7.27 points to 2,058.94.
The US Department of Commerce said Friday the world’s number one economy grew at a 2.0 percent annual rate in July-September — compared to the second quarter’s 1.3 percent expansion and the 1.9 percent forecast by most economists.
A 13 percent jump in defence spending, which tends to be volatile, and better consumer spending and housing investment propelled the growth.
However, the data did highlight flat business investment and shrinking exports.
Wall Street was almost unmoved as investors took stock of another set of disappointing earnings from the likes of Apple and Merck. The Dow ended up 0.03 percent, the S&P 500 lost 0.07 percent and the Nasdaq gained 0.06 percent.
The New York Stock Exchange announced it would close its trading floor and conduct only electronic transactions, as Hurricane Sandy closed in on the US eastern seaboard.
“In consultation with other exchanges and market participants, NYSE Euronext will close its markets on Monday... and pending confirmation on Tuesday,” the market operator said in a statement.
Joe Bracken, head of macro strategies at BT Investment Management in Sydney, suggested the impending hurricane could contribute to quiet trading in Asia.
“You’ve got the US essentially closed, so there will be less of that US liquidity that drives a lot of international markets,” he told Dow Jones Newswires.
Eyes are now on a two-day meeting of the Bank of Japan which ends Tuesday, with most investors hoping it will unveil an extension of its monetary easing policy.
Despite expectations of fresh cash being pumped into the market, the yen rose slightly in afternoon Asian trade.
The dollar was trading at 79.61 yen against 79.62 yen late Friday in New York, while the euro bought 102.70 yen compared with 103.00 yen.
The European unit was at $1.2900 from $1.2942.
Also on the horizon are the release of manufacturing figures out of China and other Asian nations, while the US will Friday unveil its non-farm payrolls data, the last before the presidential election.
And eurozone ministers will hold a series of meetings on Greece to decide whether it has done enough to fix its debt problem to receive the latest tranche of crucial aid money.
The ministers are also looking at a Greek request for the terms of its bailout to be extended by two years to 2016.
The survivors told rescuers they had set off from Libya on Sept. 1 and that 21 of the 28 people on board had fallen into the sea in rough weather
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