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Market closes firmly in the black

The Aussie sharemarket has closed higher.

The Australian sharemarket extended its recovery after weak Chinese growth data revived hopes for stimulus in the world's second biggest economy

Following the 0.7 per cent gain on Wall Street the S&P/ASX 200 index was up 0.3 per cent, but it bounced to close 32.1 points, or 0.6 per cent, up at 5420.3 as Chinese growth over the past year slowed to 7.4 per cent but beat expectations of 7.3 per cent.

The detail, however, showed the Chinese economy decelerated to an annual rate of just 5.6 per cent in the March-quarter while nominal growth - not including the inflation adjustment - slumped to 7.9 per cent.

Westpac senior economist Huw Mckay said this was the slowest period of growth in China since 1999, with the exception of the GFC period.

The Shanghai composite index was up 0.4 per cent at the close of the ASX as stimulus hopes offset the weak earnings environment.

In Tokyo the Nikkei index jumped 2.7 per cent as the yen fell on reports the Japanese government would cut its growth forecast for the first time in 18-months. Investors hope the Bank of Japan will be forced to increase its already hefty stimulus measures and that would further weaken the yen.

Overnight the S&P 500 fell almost one per cent by midday on rising tensions in Ukraine and a drop in the Empire state manufacturing index but there was no obvious catalyst for the rebound to a 0.7 per cent gain except for the Japanese growth news.

The weaker yen and gave fresh impetus to traders that use the weak yen as a cheap funding currency for so-called "carry trades" to chase high yielding assets.

A bout of US dollar strength knocked metals and the Australian dollar which lost US0.3¢ to US93.60¢, while Australian government 10-year yields lost 2.8 points to 3.965 per cent.

Gold had a choppy overnight session, slumping $US35 to $US1285 an ounce, and was trading at $US1297/oz at the close of the ASX.

Copper tumbled 1.5 per cent to $US6570 a tonne and spot iron ore was marginally firmer at $US117.10 a tonne.

More to come…