The Borneo Post

Asia stocks edge down on Europe bank woes, lower oil

-

TOKYO: Asian stocks were lower yesterday, with European banking sector concerns and lower crude oil prices dulling investors’ appetite for riskier assets.

Spreadbett­ers expected Britain’s FTSE, Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC to open slightly firmer, with Wall Street’s gains overnight just barely offsetting negative views on stocks.

Equities in Asia had gained on Tuesday from a perceived win by Democrat Hillary Clinton at the first presidenti­al debate over Republican Donald Trump, who is seen as creating greater uncertaint­y for the US and global economies.

But the relief gave way to angst about the European financial sector, gripped by worries over the health of Deutsche Bank, whose shares hit a record low overnight.

Oil, weighed down by waning hopes that a meeting of producers would reduce oversupply, also soured sentiment.

MSCI’s broadest index of AsiaPacifi­c shares outside Japan was down 0.2 per cent, erasing earlier modest gains.

South Korea’s Kospi fell 0.5 per cent and Shanghai lost 0.3 per cent.

Australian stocks slipped 0.1 per cent.

Japan’s Nikkei underperfo­rmed and was last down 1.4 per cent.

Japanese stocks were dogged by threats of a robust yen, which hurts exporters’ earnings.

“By looking at the current dollar-yen levels, companies will likely have no choice but to lower their dollar-yen assumption­s in their mid-year earnings releases,” said Norihiro Fujito, a senior investment strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities in Tokyo.

Overnight, US shares rose on broader support for equities following the presidenti­al debate and upbeat consumer confidence data, though gains were capped by energy sector weakness.

Oil fell about 3 per cent on Tuesday after Saudi Arabia and Iran dashed expectatio­ns that the two major OPEC producers would find a compromise at a meeting in Algiers to help ease a global glut of crude.

US crude had crawled up 0.3 per cent to US$ 44.79 a barrel on Wednesday, the final day of the Sept. 26-28 Internatio­nal Energy Forum gathering.

With oil prices having dropped to less than half of their 2014 highs, the Algiers talks are OPEC’s second attempt at an output agreement after a failed round in Qatar in April.

“The market currently does not expect any agreement at this meeting, so no agreement should have only limited negative impact on the oil price,” wrote Marshall Gittler, head of investment research at FXPRIMUS.

“Expectatio­ns are now so low though that if by some miracle they did come to even a halfhearte­d agreement, that would probably send prices up sharply.” The dollar was up 0.2 per cent to 100.635 yen but was still in reach of a one-month low of 100.085 seen the previous day.

It had popped up to 100.990 yen on Tuesday when Clinton was seen to have emerged as the debate winner.

But the rise faded with the market reminded that Clinton also favours a weaker dollar.

The euro was steady at US$1.1211 after losing about 0.4 per cent overnight on Europe’s banking sector worries.

The near-term market focus was on comments European Central Bank President Mario Draghi and Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen.

Draghi will face tough questions from German lawmakers on Wednesday about the central bank’s monetary policy, while Yellen will deliver semi- annual testimony before the US House Financial Services Committee. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s walk in front of an electronic­s stock display in the window of a securities company in Tokyo. Tokyo shares opened lower on September 28 as an uptick in the yen spawned worries about exports. — AFP photo
Pedestrian­s walk in front of an electronic­s stock display in the window of a securities company in Tokyo. Tokyo shares opened lower on September 28 as an uptick in the yen spawned worries about exports. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia