By Sarah Turner, MarketWatch

SYDNEY (MarketWatch) -- Asia stocks moved off early lows to gain on the last trading day of a broadly positive month that nonetheless has seen sharp divergence in performance for the region's major markets.

Friday trading had Japan's Nikkei Stock Average and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index each advancing 0.8%, while South Korea's Kospi rose 0.3%, shaking off early losses.

Chinese markets were also higher, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index and the Shanghai Composite Index each up 0.6%, although the Shanghai benchmark remained near four-year lows.

Asia's advance followed modest gains for U.S. equity markets on Thursday, with upside there limited by uncertainty that U.S. politicians will succeed in hammering out a deal to prevent more than $600 billion in tax hikes and spending cuts from taking place automatically in January.

Dampening sentiment, Republican U.S. House Speaker John Boehner said Thursday morning there has been "no substantive progress" in negotiations on the so-called fiscal cliff, briefly rattling Wall Street.

IG Index strategist Stan Shamu said the back-and-forth on the fiscal cliff would likely fuel market volatility through the end of December.

"Many [are] now convinced that negotiations will mirror that of last August's debt-ceiling disaster and go right down to the wire. As a result, a choppy last month of the year is probably the most likely scenario, disappointing those hoping for a Santa Claus rally," Shamu said.

The term "Santa Claus rally" refers to a year-end gain for shares that tends to start in December.

Still, U.S. economic data Thursday suggested the recovery continued, and Japanese data out Friday resulted in a set of consumer inflation, unemployment and household spending data that, while remaining relatively weak, either met or exceeded economist expectations.

After the data, the Japanese government announced that it has approved its second stimulus package in a little more than a month, consisting of 880.3 billion yen ($10.74 billion) in spending.

Japanese shares saw choppy trading on Friday, rising, then falling, then rising again. The Nikkei Average has gained 6% so far in November, helped by speculation that next month's general election will result in the introduction of some radical policies to help the economy.

Exporters have performed particularly well over the past month after the prospect of more monetary-policy easing sent the yen down almost 3% in November.

Yen weakness re-emerged during Friday morning's stock session, with the dollar rising to  ¥82.43, up from  ¥82.11 in early action.

Some currency-sensitive firms subsequently headed higher, with Nikon Corp. (NINOF) gaining 3.8%, Fujitsu Ltd. up 1.3% and Citizen Holdings Co. ahead by 1.4%.

Elsewhere, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. (7011.TO) climbed 1.9%, and Hitachi Ltd. (HIT) advanced 3.7%, after the firms said they will merge their thermal-power businesses and related units in a joint venture by 2014.

Hong Kong saw gains in the banking sector, with HSBC Holdings PLC up 1.2%, and Bank of Communications Co. (BCMXY) rising 2.3%.

Elsewhere in the Hong Kong financial sector, insurer Ping An Insurance Group Co. (PNGAY) climbed 1.8%, while China Life Insurance Co. (LFC) improved by 1.1%.

People's Insurance Co. Group of China -- commonly known as PICC -- was due to announce the pricing of its initial public offering Friday, ahead of a its Dec.7 trading debut.

PICC's listing is set to become the largest IPO for a Chinese state-owned company since 2010. The insurer indicated in marketing materials that it would price its shares in a range of 3.42- 4.03 Hong Kong dollars (44-52 U.S. cents), raising up to $3.6 billion.

The Hong Kong blue-chip index has gained 2% so far this month, in contrast to the Shanghai Composite, which has dropped 4.5%, and the Shenzhen Composite, which is down by more than 11% so far in the month amid concerns over the path of future corporate earnings.

Deutsche Bank said that it's now less upbeat on shares of Hong Kong-listed brokers due to high valuations, as well as a challenging outlook for the mainland stock markets. It also downgraded Haitong Securities Co. to hold from buy, with the firm's shares losing 0.6% in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. (HKXCY) fell 1% after announcing a plan to raise 7.75 billion Hong Kong dollars ($1 billion) via a private placement to fund its acquisition of the London Metal Exchange.

In South Korean trading, auto giant Hyundai Motor Co. (HYMTF) rose 0.4% but chip maker SK Hynix Inc. (HXSCL) tumbled 3.2%.

The Kospi is up 1.5% so far in November, while Sydney's S&P/ASX 200 has declined 0.2% over the month so far.

In Australia on Friday, however, the benchmark garnered support from a strong performance in the mining sector, after metals advanced in New York trade on Thursday.

Of the majors, Rio Tinto Ltd. (RIO) climbed 3.2% after announcing cost plans on Thursday, while Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. (FSUMY) rose 0.9%.

Among Japanese resource shares, oil major JX Holdings Inc. (JXHGF) rose 1.8% after its refining unit said late Thursday that it plans to raise its December crude throughput by 14% compared to a year earlier. .

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