Asian stocks pressured by Wall Street

Filomena Scalise

Filomena Scalise

Published Aug 1, 2014

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Sydney - Asian shares pared losses on Friday as data showing a surprisingly strong pick up in Chinese manufacturing helped take some of the sting out of a slump on Wall Street.

The official measure of industrial activity (PMI) rose to 51.7 in July from 51.0 in June, beating forecasts of 51.4 and the highest in 27 months.

The recovery was also broad based with 10 out of the 13 sub-indices pointing to improvement from the previous month.

The survey added to evidence that Beijing's stimulus efforts were gaining traction in the world's second largest economy, and followed news that growth in the United States had rebounded from a winter lull.

That could not entirely offset the drag from Wall Street, where the S&P 500 suffered its biggest daily loss since April.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was off 0.6 percent and Shanghai stocks eased 0.3 percent

Yet Japan's Nikkei did recoup some of its early losses to be down just 0.2 percent, while the broader Topix dipped 0.4 percent.

And losses in the region were modest compared to the 1.88 percent drop in the Dow, or the S&P 500's 2 percent fall.

Some had blamed the swoon on data showing that US labour costs recorded their biggest gain in more than 5-1/2 years and stoking speculation the Federal Reserve could raise interest rates sooner than previously thought.

But, after an initial wobble, Fed funds futures were edging higher on Friday and paring back the probability of an earlier hike.

Likewise, yields on two-year Treasury paper had dropped back to 54 basis points having been as high as 59 basis points on Wednesday.

Aiding bonds was an unexpected, and inexplicable, 10-point plunge in the Chicago purchasing managers index to 52.6 in June.

That was the sharpest drop since late 2008 and sparked talk the national survey of manufacturing, known as the ISM, might surprise on the downside later on Friday.

Also due is the ever-influential US payrolls report for July. While analysts expect another healthy gain of 233 000, a further drop in the jobless rate could add to investor jitters over interest rates.

All the muttering about when the Fed might hike has been a boon for the US dollar in recent weeks. Measured against a basket of its peers, the dollar gained 2 percent in July for its best monthly performance in 1-1/2 years.

The dollar bought 102.86 yen on Friday, after peaking at a four-month high of 103.15. The euro traded at $1.3388 , still uncomfortably close to the nine-month trough of $1.3366 plumbed earlier in the week.

If investors really were worried about US inflation it did not show in the gold market, where the metal was down at $1,283.09 after touching a six-week trough.

Oil prices also took a spill amid signs of plentiful supply, which has potentially positive implications for global inflation and economic growth.

US crude oil fell to its lowest since March around $97.66 a barrel, while Brent was off 21 cents at $105.81. Brent lost more than 6 percent in July, its biggest monthly decline since April 2013. - Reuters

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