Asian shares fell on Friday as unsatisfactory earnings from Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba heightened worries about Beijing's broad regulatory crackdown and slowing growth in the world's second-biggest economy.
That saw the region lag a solid Wall Street performance overnight, with MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan off 0.44% and set for a weekly decline of 1.2%.
Tokyo's Nikkei outperformed, however, rising 0.40% after Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced a fresh stimulus package with spending worth around 56 trillion yen ($490 billion).
Overnight, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq notched record closing highs, enhanced by upbeat corporate earnings news from companies including Nvidia.
But the tone was more subdued in Asia, with the Hong Kong benchmark down sharply 1.5%, dragged down by index heavyweight Alibaba. The Chinese e-commerce firm's shares tumbled over 10% after its second-quarter results missed expectations due to slowing consumption, increasing competition and a regulatory crackdown.
The decline reflects slowing growth in China this year, analysts said, while a broad months-long regulatory crackdown by Beijing across many segments including property and technology have weighed on investor sentiment more generally.
Chinese economic data over recent months have also underlined a loss of growth momentum, with the outlook over the next 12 months more subdued than at the begning of the year.
"Following substantial slowdown of National Bureau of Statistics retail data for the past two months, it is not surprising to us that (Alibaba) printed a missed quarter," said Citi analysts in a note, lowering their target price on the stock.
Turmoil in China's property sector, which is struggling with a heavy debt burden and a squeeze on liquidity amid Beijing's crackdown, also remain a drag on broad global sentiment.
Hong Kong shares of Country Garden Services Holding , the property management unit of Chinese developer Country Garden, plunged 16% after it raised HK$8 billion ($1 billion) in a share sale.
Chinese blue chips were flat, as was much of the region.
Elsewhere, major currencies were largely quiet with the dollar sitting just below a 16-month high hit against a basket of its peers earlier in the week.
The yen hardly reacted to the government's stimulus news, and was headed for a small weekly loss, though at 114.27 per dollar it has also recovered since touching an almost five-year low of 114.97 a few days ago.
In emerging markets, a gathering currency crisis in Turkey has driven the lira to a record low after the central bank - facing political pressure - cut rates despite inflation running near 20%. U.S. benchmark Treasury yields were steady at 1.5924%.
"The UST market is consolidating within recent ranges is awaiting new catalysts to shift valuations. ... there is a lot already in the price and as a result, progress toward higher yields is likely to be slow and defined by momentum shifts and sentiment swings," said analysts at Westpac in a note.
Oil prices were steady in early Asia. U.S. crude was flat at $79 a barrel. Brent crude rose 0.06% to $81.33 per barrel.
On Thursday, oil fell to six-week lows after Reuters reported, citing sources, that the Biden administration asked some of the world's largest oil consuming nations - consisting of China, India and Japan - to consider releasing crude stockpiles in a coordinated effort to lower global energy prices.