Energy stocks were among the top performers in Asia on August 15, 2016

Tokyo stocks were flat on Monday after figures showed Japan's economy stalled in the second quarter, but some other Asian markets climbed along with a rise in the oil price. 

Shanghai jumped more than one percent while Sydney and Hong Kong were also up by mid-morning, even after weak economic data out of the eurozone and US on Friday left European and Wall Street stocks under pressure and gave Asia a weak lead. 

In Japan, data showed that growth in the world's third largest economy was flat at 0.0 percent quarter-on-quarter, missing economists' predictions for a 0.2 percent expansion in the April-June period as weak exports and a fall in business spending held back activity.

On an annualised basis, the economy expanded by a slight 0.2 percent, well off expectations for 0.7 percent growth.

"Today's data are quite disappointing," said Junko Nishioka, chief economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking.

"The situation is becoming tougher and tougher. There is the rally in the yen and worries about Japan's prospects in overseas markets. And so companies are becoming more pessimistic about making investments."

Tokyo edged up just 0.79 points percent by the break. However, embattled electronics maker Sharp surged 15 percent on news the giant has completed a deal to be acquired by Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision, known as Foxconn.

- Oil continues rise -

In the US, trade was muted Friday after economic data showed that US retail sales for July came in at $457.7 billion, the same as the previous month, suggesting a key driver of the world's largest economy had plateaued by mid-summer.

Analysts said this could mean a possible further delay in a rate hike by the US central bank. 

Official data out of Europe meanwhile revealed that the EU's biggest economy Germany expanded by 0.4 percent in adjusted terms between April and June but overall eurozone second quarter growth slowed sharply, weighed down by Brexit concerns and a poor performance in struggling France and Italy.

Growth in the 19-nation eurozone came in at 0.3 percent, slowing from 0.6 percent in the three months to January but unchanged from the initial estimate given last month.

Government figures released in China Friday also disappointed, with growth in retail sales, factory output and fixed asset investment also missing expectations.

But some Asian markets appeared to shrug off the weak data.

Hong Kong and Shanghai rose 0.5 percent and 1.4 percent respectively, while Sydney added 0.2 percent. 

Financial markets in Seoul were closed for a public holiday.

Energy stocks were among the top performers as the oil price continued to rise on hopes of producer action to control output. 

At around 0300 GMT, West Texas Intermediate rose 44 cents to $44.93 while Brent added 41 cents to $47.38.

"Oil is now close to an equilibrium price, and unless we get further developments, I would expect to see it trading around the $44 to $45 level for the balance of the week," Michael McCarthy, a chief market strategist in Sydney at CMC Markets told Bloomberg News.

Oil futures suffered a bearish July, with prices sinking on worries of bloated inventories, oversupply and less-than-solid demand.

But prices got a boost after Saudi Arabian oil minister Khalid al-Falih was quoted Thursday as saying producers could use next month's OPEC meeting to discuss "any possible action" on stabilising markets, despite the record Saudi production levels last month.

- Key figures at around 0300 GMT -

Tokyo - Nikkei 225: FLAT at 16,920.71 (break)

Shanghai - Composite: UP 1.4 percent at 3,094.668

Hong Kong - Hang Seng: UP 0.5 percent at 22,869.24

Euro/dollar: DOWN at $1.1157 from $1.1165 Friday

Pound/dollar: UP at $1.2927 from $1.2918

Dollar/yen: UP at 101.33 yen from 101.14 yen

New York - DOW: DOWN 0.2 percent at 18,576.47 (close)

London - FTSE 100: UP less than 0.1 percent at 6,916.02 points (close)

SourcE: AFP