July 3 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks rose, lifting a regional benchmark to a record, on signs of increasing demand for exports, metals and crude oil.
Honda Motor Co. and Samsung Electronics Co. led gains after reports showed the pace of manufacturing in the U.S. and Europe is accelerating. BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's biggest mining company and Australia's No. 1 oil explorer, advanced to an all- time high.
``The manufacturing numbers gave the market the whiff of assurance it was looking for,'' said Leslie Phang, who helps manage $1 billion at Commonwealth Private Bank in Singapore. ``Things are chugging along nicely.''
Wesfarmers Ltd., Australia's biggest home-improvement chain, fell after it agreed to buy retailer Coles Group Ltd. for A$19.6 billion ($16.8 billion). New orders at some of South Korea's largest shipyards lifted shares of Hyundai Heavy Industries Co.
The Morgan Stanley Capital International Asia-Pacific Index added 0.6 percent to 155.54 at 7:09 p.m. in Tokyo, extending a three-day, 2.4 percent rally. Indexes in Hong Kong, India, Indonesia and the Philippines also rose to records, while Thailand's SET Index climbed 2.6 percent to the highest in more than a decade.
Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average was little changed while the broader Topix index added 0.1 percent. China Vanke Co. paced China's CSI 300 Index higher for the first time in four days, ending the measure's longest losing streak in six months. China Shenhua Energy Co. surged in Hong Kong after saying it may raise $6.3 billion in a share sale.
`Good Time'
U.S. shares climbed yesterday after the Institute for Supply Management's factory index rose to a 14-month high last month. In Europe, Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc said its index of manufacturing in the 13 euro nations advanced to 55.6 from 55 in May, higher than a first estimate of 55.4 published June 21.
``Productivity is rising and that will lead to higher wages and increased consumer spending,'' said Koichi Takatsuka, who oversees $1 billion at UAM Japan Inc. in Tokyo. ``It's a good time to be invested in exporters.''
Honda, Japan's No. 2 automaker by sales, climbed 0.7 percent to 4,570 yen. Honda made about 80 percent of its sales outside Japan in the past business year. Samsung, Asia's biggest maker of chips and mobile phones, gained 1.1 percent to 571,000 won. It accounted for about 16 percent of South Korea's exports last year.
AU Optronics Corp., the world's third-largest liquid-crystal display maker, added 2 percent to NT$56.90 in Taiwan. HSBC Holdings Plc, whose North American business generated 21 percent of its pretax profit in 2006, rose 0.5 percent to HK$143.20 in Hong Kong.
Metals, Oil
BHP Billiton jumped 2.4 percent to A$35.88. Rio Tinto Group, the world's third-biggest mining company, gained 2.8 percent to A$100.70. Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Japan's second-largest copper smelter and No. 1 nickel producer, rose 1.5 percent to 2,785 yen.
A measure of six metals traded on the London Metal Exchange, including copper and zinc, rose 1.7 percent yesterday, with copper climbing 2.3 percent to a seven-week high. Crude oil rose 0.6 percent yesterday to $71.09 a barrel in New York, the highest close since August. Futures were recently at $70.84.
Woodside Petroleum Ltd., Australia's No. 2 oil explorer, added 1.4 percent to A$46.33. Cnooc Ltd., China's largest offshore oil explorer, jumped 4.3 percent to HK$9.24 in Hong Kong.
``If you've got good commodities prices, the big miners and outfits like Woodside go ahead and it helps drive the market higher,'' said Matthew Kidman, who helps manage the equivalent of $350 million at Wilson Asset Management in Sydney.
Wesfarmers, Hyundai Heavy
Shares of Wesfarmers dropped 6.8 percent to A$42.60, the biggest percentage decline on the MSCI World Index. Coles, Australia's No. 2 retailer, slid 3.1 percent to A$15.62.
In Australia's biggest takeover, Wesfarmers will issue as much as A$14 billion in new stock and take on more than A$8 billion in debt to secure control of Coles' 3,000 supermarkets, discount stores and office supply outlets.
The deal, which will double the company's size and make it Australia's biggest retailer, will lower Wesfarmers' earnings- per-share for at least the next three years, said Richard Johnson, an analyst at ABN Amro Holding NV in Sydney. He cut his rating on the stock to ``hold'' from ``buy'' today.
In South Korea, a measure of transport-equipment makers that includes Hyundai Heavy jumped 3.7 percent, the second-biggest gain among the Kospi index's 19 industry groups.
Hyundai Heavy, the world's biggest shipbuilder, surged 4 percent to 365,500. The company said yesterday it received a 722.4 billion won ($784 million) order to build container vessels for a buyer in Panama.
Its unit Hyundai Mipo Dockyard Co. also said yesterday it got 548.1 billion won in orders from Europe and Asia to produce 10 vessels. The shares added 3.8 percent to 274,000 won.
More Contracts
Samsung Heavy Industries Co., the world's No. 2 shipbuilder, climbed 6.3 percent to 50,500 won. It received a 566.5 billion won drill-ship contract from a shipowner in the Americas, the company said yesterday. Samsung Heavy has received $10.1 billion worth of orders this year, 92 percent of its full-year target.
``It's very good for yards that shipowners are making enough profit to keep ordering new ships,'' said Kwak Tai Ho, who helps manage $1.2 billion at Kyobo Investment Management Co. in Seoul. New orders are ``pushing up the stocks. It seems that shipyards can expect a lot more contracts in the second half.''
Separately, Moody's Investors Service said it placed South Korea's government credit rating on review for possible upgrade, citing the nation's fiscal prudence, favorable economic outlook and contained geopolitical risks.
China Vanke, Shenhua
China's CSI 300 rose 2 percent, snapping a three-day, 7 percent loss. The yuan added as much as 0.12 percent to 7.5955 against the dollar in Shanghai today, the first time that it climbed past 7.60 since the end of a dollar peg in July 2005.
A stronger local currency boosts the value of lenders' yuan- denominated assets and attracts speculative money from abroad, betting on further strengthening, into the property market, which offers higher returns than banking deposits.
China Vanke, the nation's largest listed property developer, gained 4.1 percent to 19.41 yuan. China Merchants Bank Co., the seventh-largest lender, rose 2.3 percent to 24.42 yuan.
China Shenhua, the nation's largest coal producer, jumped 6.6 percent to HK$29.10 in Hong Kong after the company said it may raise as much as $6.3 billion in what may become China's biggest share sale this year.
The company will sell as many as 1.8 billion yuan- denominated shares in Shanghai to raise funds for expansion as demand for the fuel surges.
China Shenhua contributed to a 3.4 percent rally in the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, which tracks the so-called H shares of 41 mainland companies. Shares also rose on speculation Chinese investors will pour funds into Hong Kong once the government eases restrictions on overseas investment on July 5.
Mobius, Rogers
Mark Mobius, who oversees $30 billion at Templeton Asset Management Ltd., said yesterday he prefers China's H shares because they are cheaper and ``growth is good.'' Jim Rogers, chairman of New York-based Beeland Interests Inc. and who predicted the start of the commodities rally in 1999, said he's sold out of all emerging markets with the exception of China.
Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. , which operates the city's stock market, advanced as investors bet an increasing market turnover will boost the bourse's earnings. An average HK$77 billion ($9.9 billion) changed hands daily in June, compared with HK$30 billion a year earlier.
The stock soared 7.4 percent to HK$118.70, the highest close since its trading debut in June 2000.
There is too much liquidity in China and investors are ``chasing after concepts and new ideas,'' said Yoon Lai Choo, who helps manage $10 billion of global assets at Comgest (Far East) Ltd. in Hong Kong.

