By Shinichi Saoshiro
TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian stocks fell
on Thursday, led by losses on Wall Street, while a rise in euro zone
debt yields amid a global bond rout kept the euro near a two-month peak
versus the dollar, while the pound lost ground ahead of Britain's
election later in the day.
Sterling was flat against the dollar at $1.5244 (GBP=D4). It has lost momentum after touching a two-month peak of $1.5498 last week.
The Shanghai Composite Index (.SSEC) was down 1.4 percent on fears of fresh moves by regulators to reduce leverage in stock trading, extending its losses so far this week to 6.1 percent. [.SS]
Weak U.S. indicators also added to uncertainty regarding when the first rate hike by the Fed could take place. Data on Wednesday showed tepid private job gains and a second straight quarterly decline in productivity. (ECONUS)
Shrinking expectations for an early rate hike - a tightening in June appears less and less likely - weighed on the dollar and helped its counterparts like the yen and euro.
The euro was steady at $1.1343 (EUR=), not far from a two-month high of $1.1371 struck overnight. The dollar stood little changed at 119.49 yen, pulling further away from this week's high of 120.51 touched on Tuesday (JPY=).
The euro continued to get support from a surge in euro zone bond yields, notably on German Bunds, in light of an easing in deflation fears thanks to improving European data.
The
Conservative and the opposition Labour Party have been neck and neck in
opinion polls that indicate Britain could be in store for a hung
parliament and another coalition government.
The euro climbed as far as 74.49 pence (EURGBP=R), reaching a high last seen in mid-February. It was last at 74.41 pence. Sterling was flat against the dollar at $1.5244 (GBP=D4). It has lost momentum after touching a two-month peak of $1.5498 last week.
Spreadbetters
expected negative sentiment in equities to be retained in Europe,
forecasting a slightly lower open for Britain's FTSE (.FTSE), Germany's
DAX (.GDAXI) and France's CAC (.FCHI).
As
European deflation fears have ebbed, a seeming reversal of trades
linked to the European Central Bank's big quantitative easing has
resulted in a sell-off in core European bonds and equities this week,
rattling investors across asset classes.
MSCI's
broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 1 percent as
shares retreated in China, Hong Kong, Australia, South Korean and
Malaysia.The Shanghai Composite Index (.SSEC) was down 1.4 percent on fears of fresh moves by regulators to reduce leverage in stock trading, extending its losses so far this week to 6.1 percent. [.SS]
The
index is still up an impressive 29 percent so far this year on
expectations that China's policy easing would shore up equities. The
steep gains, however, have triggered expectations of a sharp correction.
"Another
few such declines and some of the millions of retail investors who have
recently piled into the market might start to wonder if it really is a
guaranteed way to make 30-40 percent returns every year or not,"
analysts at Rabobank wrote in a note.
Tokyo's
Nikkei (.N225) lost 1.1 percent in its first trading day of the week.
Japanese financial markets were closed from Monday to Wednesday for
public holidays.
U.S. stocks ended weaker on
Wednesday after U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen warned of high
share valuations, adding to anxiety about future interest rates. [.N]Weak U.S. indicators also added to uncertainty regarding when the first rate hike by the Fed could take place. Data on Wednesday showed tepid private job gains and a second straight quarterly decline in productivity. (ECONUS)
Shrinking expectations for an early rate hike - a tightening in June appears less and less likely - weighed on the dollar and helped its counterparts like the yen and euro.
The euro was steady at $1.1343 (EUR=), not far from a two-month high of $1.1371 struck overnight. The dollar stood little changed at 119.49 yen, pulling further away from this week's high of 120.51 touched on Tuesday (JPY=).
The euro continued to get support from a surge in euro zone bond yields, notably on German Bunds, in light of an easing in deflation fears thanks to improving European data.
German 10-year bond yields
hit a four-month high of 0.595 percent overnight. Just last month it
had hit a record low of 0.05 percent, when hopes were high that the
ECB's trillion euro bond buying quantitative easing program would drive
the yield into negative territory. [GVD/EUR]
French, Dutch, Belgian and Austrian equivalent bond yields also scaled 2015 peaks on Wednesday.
In
addition to sending chills through financial markets worldwide, the
retreat in euro zone bonds has also weighed on U.S. Treasuries and
Japanese government bonds, pushing their 10-year yields to two-month highs.
"The
focus is on whether ECB officials will express concerns over the euro's
rebound and weaker European stocks, and whether that would halt the
rise in Bund yields," said Masafumi Yamamoto, senior strategist for
Monex, Inc. in Tokyo.
"The euro's bounce could stop
if Bund yields steady, but without hints of further ECB easing it could
be hard to keep the currency from rising again."
In
commodities, U.S. crude slipped on profit taking following an overnight
climb to 2015 peaks reached after a first drawdown in U.S. crude
inventories since January. [O/R]
U.S. crude (CLc1) was down 0.7 percent at $60.53 a barrel after reaching a five-month high of $62.58 on Wednesday.
(Editing by Eric Meijer & Kim Coghill)
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