TOKYO
(Reuters) - Asian stocks mostly fell on Thursday as fresh data
signalling a further loss of momentum in China's economy weighed on
sentiment, while the yen slid to multi-year lows against the dollar and
euro.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dropped 0.3 percent, briefly touching a three-week low.The China flash HSBC/Markit manufacturing purchasing managers' index published on Thursday showed factory output contracted in the world's second-biggest economy for the first time in six months.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng (.HSI) was down 0.1 percent and the Shanghai Composite Index (.SSEC) lost 0.3 percent.
Further declines in oil and other commodities such as iron ore and coal prices weighed on some bourses. Australian shares (.AXJO) shed 0.4 percent to give up this year's gains.
Tokyo's Nikkei (.N225), on the other hand, edged up 0.1 percent, putting it within reach of a seven-year high that the index reached last week.
Supporting the index's gains was a weaker yen, which lifted shares of exporters.
The dollar hovered near a new seven-year peak of 118.275 yen (JPY=) reached early in the session.
The
U.S. currency rose 1 percent overnight after the minutes of the Federal
Reserve's last policy meeting showed its members were relatively
unconcerned about the dollar's strength.
"The
Fed has left the green light shining brightly for further USD gains,"
said Alan Ruskin, global head of currency strategy at Deutsche.
The
Fed minutes also showed the central bank was still on track to raise
interest rates next year, pushing U.S. Treasury yields higher.
The
Fed's hints of confidence about the economy further highlighted the
divergence in U.S. monetary policy relative to those of Europe and
Japan. The European Central Bank and Bank of Japan are struggling to
stave off deflation and shore up their shaky economies.
Beaten
down by the dollar, the yen also slid against the euro. The euro traded
near a six-year peak of 148.25 yen (EURJPY=). The euro fetched $1.2535
(EUR=), off a three-week high of $1.2602 overnight.
The Australian dollar, sensitive to changes in China's economic performance, was down 0.3 percent to $0.8590 (AUD=D4).
In
commodities, gold remained under pressure. It fell more than 1 percent
on Wednesday after a poll showed weaker support among Swiss voters for a
referendum that would require the Swiss National Bank (SNB) to boost
its gold reserves.
If
the "Save our Swiss gold" proposal is approved, the SNB would be banned
from selling any of its gold reserves and would have to hold at least
20 percent of its assets in the metal, compared with 7.8 percent last
month.
Spot gold (XAU=) was at $1,179.33 an ounce, off the week's high of $1,204.70 set on Tuesday.
U.S.
crude oil futures extended their losses as the bullish dollar and an
unexpected rise in U.S. stockpiles countered hopes of a possible OPEC
output cut.
U.S. crude (CLc1) was down 9 cents at $74.49 a barrel.
(This story corrects the ranking of China's economy in the third paragraph)
(Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in SYDNEY; Editing by Richard Borsuk, Kim Coghill and Ryan Woo)
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