(Updates with shares)
By Rafael Nam
HONG KONG, April 1 (Reuters) - Some Asian stocks gained on Tuesday as better-than-expected data, including for South Korean exports, offered some respite to markets that have suffered this year from fears of a severe global economic slowdown.
But mounting writedowns in the financial sector capped any stronger gains. UBS AG <UBSN.VX> said on Tuesday it wrote down an additional $19 billion in assets, and posted a net loss of about $12.1 billion in the first quarter. [
]European shares were set to open lower following UBS' announcement, with analysts saying a recovery in global stocks is unlikely until confidence in the financial sector improves.
Commodities and oil largely steadied after plunging on Monday, while the U.S. dollar was unchanged against major currencies, such as the yen.
"People are waiting for the smoke to settle after the bombs landed, and nobody's in the mood to do much," said Hans Kunnen, had of investment markets research at Colonial First State.
The MSCI's measure of Asian stocks outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> was flat by 0620 GMT, though it had gained almost 1 percent at one point.
The mixed performance came a day after the index posted a 14.2 percent loss in the first quarter -- its biggest in over five years -- as fears about the global economy and a credit crunch soured confidence.
Some regional stock indexes stemmed the recent losses after Wall Street rose on Monday on stronger-than-expected Midwestern business activity in the United States, raising some hopes that an expected economic slowdown will not be as severe. [
]Closer to home, South Korea said exports in March rose by a higher-than-expected 19.1 percent from a year earlier, soothing concern that a slowdown in the global economy was hitting demand for the country's goods. [
]Still, economists widely expect a slowdown in the region to be inevitable, with another potential headache coming from rising inflationary pressures.
According to the World Bank on Tuesday, East Asia faces a challenging 2008 as falling exports and reduced business spending slows economist growth at a time when rising food prices push up inflation rates. [
]Analysts are also wary of calling an end to the global financial crisis. Lehman Brothers <LEH.N>, a U.S. investment bank beset by rumours of not having enough funding, said after the close of U.S. trade it plans to raise $3 billion of capital to quash questions about its stability. [
]NIKKEI RISES
Among the day's gainers, Japan's Nikkei average <
> ended up 1 percent, even after the Tankan survey showed weakening Japanese business sentiment, as investors saw the uncertainty about the economy as sufficiently priced in an index that dropped 18.2 percent over the previous quarter. [ ]Shares in Australia <
> rose 0.1 percent, Singapore < > rose 0.3 percent, while Hong Kong < > was up 1.3 percent.Stocks in South Korea <
> ended flat, though among the gainers, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd <005930.KS> added 2.1 percent after saying it is considering a small increase in prices for computer memory chips. [ ]Elsewhere, Shanghai's main index <
> fell 3.2 percent, continuing a slide that has seen it lose 34 percent in the previous quarter alone, while stocks in India < > and Taiwan < > fell under 2 percent each.Oil hovered below $102 a barrel on Tuesday, as a forecast of lower U.S. gasoline stocks stopped a slide that had taken prices down $4 on Monday alone, following a projected recovery in Iraq's exports after heavy fighting in the oil port city of Basra ended.
U.S. crude for May delivery <CLc1> fell 13 cents to $101.41 a barrel on the Globex electronic trading platform.
Gold <XAU=> eased a tad to $908.50/$909.40 an ounce from $916.20/917.00 late in U.S. trade on Monday.
The dollar traded little changed against the euro a day after posting its biggest quarterly loss in four years, with the yen slipping slightly after the country's quarterly tankan survey.
The dollar was at 99.92 yen <JPY=>, while the euro eased slightly to $1.5774 <EUR=>.
But Japanese government bond futures fell sharply on Tuesday as a weaker-than-expected 10-year debt auction prompted a sell-off. June 10-year futures fell 0.72 point to 139.80 <2JGBv1> after sliding as low as 139.85. (Editing by Louise Heavens)