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By Tom Miles
HONG KONG, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Asian investors shrugged off a rash of weak economic indicators on Monday to pick up stocks that looked like weathering a downturn, while oil and metals kept close to record prices as supply concerns continued to bite.
Investors, glued to screens for signs of a U.S. recession that could infect the global economy, saw more evidence that growth in the world's largest economy was slipping.
The Dow Jones industrial average <
> dipped 0.2 percent on Friday on concerns about consumer spending after an index of consumer sentiment fell to a 16-year low and retailer Best Buy <BBY.N> warned that shopper traffic dropped off after the holidays. [ ]"Despite the weak data, Wall Street eked out only a small decline on Friday," said Kim Young-gak, an analyst at Hyundai Securities.
"Whereas investors are still bracing for more potential negatives and additional market falls, they seem to be betting that the scope of any losses would not be as deep as the one seen in January."
MSCI's measure of Asia Pacific stocks excluding Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> was up 0.6 percent by 0200 GMT but is still down nearly 10 percent so far this year.
Japan's Nikkei average <.225> was up 1.3 percent, with Toshiba Corp <6502.T> and Sony Corp <6758.T> both rising after a Toshiba source said it was conceding defeat in the high-definition DVD format war.
TANKAN WEAK
The latest economic data from Japan was also weak but last week's better-than-expected gross domestic product figure continued to have a hold over markets.
"The market mood has improved following GDP and U.S. retail data last week," said Noritsugu Hirakawa, strategist at Okasan Securities.
Sentiment among Japanese manufacturers worsened to a three-year low in February, hurt by rising raw material costs and lacklustre personal consumption, the Reuters Tankan survey of business confidence showed on Monday. [
]It matched a low marked in February 2005, when Japan's economic growth was at a standstill, reinforcing views that the Bank of Japan will keep rates on hold at 0.5 percent or even cut them this year on worries over the outlook.
Other data showed softness in manufacturing in New York state and worries about the stability of bond insurers. U.S. markets will be closed on Monday for the Presidents Day holiday.
European Central Bank (ECB) Governing Council member Christian Noyer said in an interview released on Sunday that euro zone growth might be weaker than hoped as a result of market turmoil but he saw no "big setback". [
]The dollar held steady against the yen <JPY=> as many investors stayed on the sidelines ahead of more data this week.
"Friday's stock fall in the U.S. was relatively shallow despite weak U.S. economic reports and that could mean sentiment for the dollar is improving for now," said Hiroshi Yoshida, a trader at Shinkin Central Bank.
ONLY A SMALL DECLINE
Seoul stocks <
> rose 0.7 percent as shipbuilders such as Hyundai Heavy Industries Co <009540.KS> extended gains amid a growing perception that worries over slowing orders growth have been priced in, while recently beaten-down lenders advanced.Australian shares dropped, lead by banking stocks after Australia and New Zealand Banking Group <ANZ.AX> flagged a $200 million provision for exposure to a U.S. insurer, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng <
> dipped 0.1 percent. Shanghai < > stocks added 1.3 percent to trim some of 2008's hefty losses.While stocks have been in the doldrums this year, commodities and oil have struck new record highs, with supply problems and buoyant Asian demand keeping prices high.
Palladium <XPD=> hit a 6 year high of $450 an ounce on Monday, tracking sister metal platinum <XPT=>, which rallied to a record high for the 13th successive day on acute power problems in South Africa.
Oil <CLc1> hovered above $95 a barrel as investors weighed the effects of a slowing U.S. economy against an escalating row between OPEC member Venezuela and oil major Exxon Mobil <XOM.N>.
"Oil prices are remaining at firm levels, buttressed by perceived supply side risks," David Moore, a resource analyst at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said in a research note.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said on Sunday the state could sue U.S. oil major Exxon Mobil for unpaid oil taxes, and repeated threats to cut oil sales to the United States if Washington attacked the South American country. [
] (Additional reporting by Kim Soyoung in SEOUL; Taiga Uranaka and Satomi Noguchi in TOKYO; Fayen Wong in SYDNEY; Lewa Pardomuan in SINGAPORE; Editing by Lincoln Feast)