Asian markets mostly sank Tuesday, giving up much of their gains from the previous session, as data showing China's economy growing at its slowest pace in five years trumped another positive lead from Wall Street.

After the wild swings of last week that were fuelled by global growth fears, Monday's hefty advances across the region raised hopes shares were on a more even keel as the earnings season approaches.

However the data out of China confirmed the world's number two economy is struggling to pick up the pace despite government measures to boost growth.

Tokyo slipped 2.03 percent, or 306.95 points, to 14,804.28 a day after clocking up a gain of almost four percent, while Seoul shed 0.77 percent, or 14.78 points, to 1,915.28.

Shanghai dipped 0.72 percent, or 17.07 points, to 2,339.66 and in the late afternoon Hong Kong was 0.18 percent lower.

But Sydney ended 0.11 percent higher, adding 5.6 points to 5,325.0.

Stocks surged on Monday in response to Friday's Wall Street advance that was propelled by bargain-hunting and upbeat US corporate results.

However, another day of gains in New York was unable to give the same lift to Asia on Tuesday. The Dow rose 0.12 percent, the S&P 500 added 0.91 percent and the Nasdaq jumped 1.35 percent.

In Beijing, the National Bureau of Statistics said the economy grew 7.3 percent year-on-year in July-September, lower than the 7.5 percent expansion in the previous three months and the slowest since the 6.6 percent in the first quarter of 2009.

But it exceeded the median forecast of 7.2 percent in an AFP survey of 17 economists, and some analysts said upbeat industrial production figures suggested the slowdown may have bottomed out.

China is a crucial driver of world growth and any weakness fuels concerns about its knock-on effect for other countries, from the United States to the eurozone to Australia.

While investors initially took the numbers in their stride, with Hong Kong and Shanghai edging up, shares headed south in the afternoon.

On currency markets the dollar fell to 106.33 yen from 106.92 yen in New York and well below the 107.10 yen earlier Monday in Asia.

The euro bought $1.2821 and 136.34 yen against $1.2800 and 136.86 yen.

Oil prices were mixed. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for November delivery fell 49 cents to $82.22 a barrel and Brent crude for December added $1.15 to $85.55.

Gold was at $1,248.32 an ounce against $1,244.57 late Monday.

In other markets:

-- Taipei eased 0.10 percent, or 8.50 points, to 8,654.64.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co closed 0.79 percent lower at Tw$125.0, while Hon Hai Precision Industry fell 0.32 percent to Tw$93.5.

-- Wellington rose 0.68 percent, or 35.24 points, to 5,233.12.

Spark was up 1.21 percent at NZ$2.935 and Air New Zealand added 1.59 percent to NZ$1.86.