By Anna Prior 
 

International companies trading in New York closed higher Friday, snapping back somewhat after a rough start to the week that saw falling commodities prices and concerns about China's economic growth weigh on shares.

The Bank of New York index of ADRs rose 0.9% to 134.72.

The International Monetary Fund said the markets overreacted to recent lackluster Chinese data, and that the country's economy remains on track to grow 8% this year.

The European index added 0.6% to 126.21.

Anheuser-Busch InBev NV (BUD, ABI.BT) and Mexico's Grupo Modelo SAB (GPMCY, GMODELO.MX) finalized a settlement that resolves the Justice Department's challenge to the beer makers' planned merger. The parties on Friday submitted a proposed final settlement for federal court approval in Washington, in which the companies agreed to divest Modelo's entire U.S. business to Constellation Brands Inc. (STZ). Shares of the Belgium-based brewer rose 1.7% to $99.22.

However German software firm SAP AG (SAP, SAP.XE) dropped 4% to $75.11 after reporting a 7% rise in first-quarter revenue, below market expectations.

The Asian index increased 1.3% to 138.78.

Shares of Chinese telecommunications companies got a boost after Morgan Stanley advised adding to this sector after an extremely weak recent performance. The firm increased its Chinese telecom weight from 30% to 35% in its Asian telecom portfolio, saying it expects the sector's first-quarter results to be steady. Shares of China Telecom Corp. (CHA, 0728.HK, K3ED.SG), Morgan Stanley's preferred pick, rose 3.6% to $48.33.

Meanwhile, India's Wipro Ltd. (WIT, 507685.BY) Friday beat estimates with a 17% rise in quarterly net profit. However, the company forecast weak sales at its information-technology division, indicating continuing soft demand for its software-outsourcing services. The weak outlook weighed on shares, which fell 4.1% to $8.13.

The Latin American index climbed 1.4% to 315.38 and the emerging markets index jumped 1.8% to 273.63.

Financially troubled Mexican homebuilder Desarrolladora Homex SAB (HXM, HOMEX.MX) said Friday it has struck a deal to sell its stake in federal penitentiaries in the states of Morelos and Chiapas to companies controlled by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim for four billion pesos ($327 million). Homex plans to use about half of the proceeds for working capital, and the rest to prepay debt. Shares surged 41% to $8.18.

-Write to Anna Prior at anna.prior@dowjones.com

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