Asian shares post worst first-half performance in 5 years

Reuters 

(Reuters) - Asian stocks declined sharply in June amid higher global bond yields and mounting China-U.S. trade friction that threatened global economic growth.

In the first half of 2018, the MSCI Asia-ex-index fell 5.4 percent, marking its biggest drop in five years. The Asian markets saw a similar dismal performance in 2013 when the said it would unwind its monetary easing policy, stoking a broad sell-off in regional markets.

Trade tensions between two of the world's biggest economies - the and - escalated last month keeping Asian markets on the edge.

The has threatened to impose duties on up to $450 billion of Chinese imports, with the first $34 billion portion set to go into effect by July 6 deadline.

Chinese stock markets dropped about 8 percent in June, posting their biggest decline in 29 months. China's yuan was trading near a seven-month low on Monday as investors took a cautious stance amid a widening trade conflict.

and Hong Kong stocks saw a sharp decline in June, while shares ended 3.3 percent higher last month.

New Zealand, and stocks have the highest price-earnings ratio based on 12-month forward earnings in the region, according to Eikon data.

(Reporting by and Patturaja Murugaboopathy; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, July 02 2018. 16:18 IST