Asian shares slide

A businessman talks on his phone in front of a display showing Tokyo stock information in Tokyo, Japan. Picture: Kimimasa Mayama

A businessman talks on his phone in front of a display showing Tokyo stock information in Tokyo, Japan. Picture: Kimimasa Mayama

Published Sep 29, 2015

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Tokyo - Asian shares skidded to 3-1/2-year lows and the dollar sagged on Tuesday, pulled down by a sharp losses on Wall Street after weak Chinese data rekindled worries about its fragile economy.

Commodities struggled after fears of weaker demand pushed them to multi-year lows overnight. Adding to the gloom, commodity trader Glencore's Hong Kong-listed shares were around 28-percent lower on Tuesday, after its London-listed stock plunged on debt worries a day earlier.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slumped 2.2 percent, touching its lowest levels since June 2012 and extending early declines after Chinese shares opened lower.

China's blue-chip CSI300 index and the Shanghai Composite Index were both down 1.8 percent.

Japan's Nikkei stock index tumbled 2.8 percent to 8-month lows.

“There is a lot of red in Asian equity markets at the moment,” said Martin King, co-managing director at Tyton Capital Advisors.

“Disappointing industrial profits in China continue to bolster concerns about growth and many investors are taking profits from the Nikkei and sitting in cash and alternatives, or repatriating capital to western markets in a perceived flight to quality.”

Chinese industrial companies' profits fell at their fastest rate in four years, official data showed on Monday, sparking fresh fears about the strength of that country's economy ahead the final reading of China's Caixin Purchasing Managers' Index on Thursday.

On Wall Street on Monday, major indexes all closed sharply down. The S&P 500 index hit a one-month low on bullish US consumer spending data in August as it raised concerns the Federal Reserve could hike rates at a time of slackening global growth.

The Fed held off from raising interest rates at its meeting earlier this month, citing worries about the global economy, particularly China.

But New York Fed President William Dudley said the central bank remains on track for a likely rate hike this year and could move as soon as next month.

John Williams, head of the San Francisco Fed, also signalled support for an interest rate hike this year, though Chicago Fed chief Charles Evans sounded a far more dovish tone.

“Markets have heard such talk before and with equities under pressure, it was hard to take rate hike talk seriously,” Sean Callow, senior currency strategist at Westpac in Sydney, said in a note to clients on Tuesday.

US non-farm payrolls on Friday could add more clarity to the timing of a US policy move, and prop up the sagging greenback.

For now, lower U.S. Treasury yields continued to pressure the dollar, as investors sought the safety of fixed-income assets.

The yield on the benchmark US 10-year note stood at 2.084 percent, below its US close of 2.095 percent on Monday.

The dollar was down about 0.2 percent against its Japanese counterpart at 119.70 yen, well below Friday's high of 121.24. The euro slipped about 0.1 percent to 134.68 yen .

The euro edged up about 0.1 percent to $1.1252, pulling further away from a low of $1.1116 touched on Friday. On Wednesday, a flash estimate of annual euro zone inflation is expected to show a zero reading in September, according to a Reuters poll.

The dollar index slipped about 0.1 percent to 95.905, extending the previous session's 0.4 percent drop.

Crude oil futures steadied after plunging nearly 3 percent overnight as the downbeat Chinese data fuelled fears about global demand.

US crude was up about 0.1 percent at $44.46 a barrel, while Brent was flat at $47.34.

REUTERS

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