Asian stock markets were trading in a mixed pattern on 28 April 2016
ReutersInvestors were happy with the decision taken by the US Fed overnight even though the central bank said it would keep the door open for an increase in rates in its June policy meeting. However, investors were disappointed with the decision of BOJ, as they were expecting the central bank to announce further stimulus.
Shingo Ide, chief equity strategist for the NLI Research Institute said, "The stock market was disappointed about the BOJ decision, and now Japanese stock prices are going down. The stock market will search the bottom level of their price today."
Hideyuki Ishiguro, senior strategist at Daiwa Securities, opined that BOJ "might have been ready to act if the Federal Open Market Committee outcome overnight had pointed to a June rate increase, New York stocks had fallen sharply and other global markets had destabilized."
Indices in the rest of Asia traded as follows on 28 April at 6.02am GMT:
| Country | Index | Price | Up/Down | %Change |
| Hong Kong | Hang Seng Index | 21,411.12 | Up | 0.23% |
| Japan | Nikkei 225 | 16,665.18 | Down | 3.62% |
| South Korea | KOSPI | 1,999.17 | Down | 0.81% |
| India | CNX Nifty | 7,916.00 | Down | 0.80% |
| Australia | S&P/ASX 200 | 5,222.70 | Up | 0.67% |
Among commodities, oil prices consolidated after hitting a 2016 peak. On 28 April, WTI crude oil was trading 0.64% lower at $45.04 (£30.93, €39.70) a barrel, while Brent was 0.57% lower at $46.91 a barrel at 6.09 am GMT.
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