Stocks pressured as U.S.-China trade fight revives growth fears; oil elevated

Reuters  |  TOKYO 

By Shinichi Saoshiro

MSCI's broadest index of shares outside <.MIAPJ0000PUS> edged down 0.1 percent.

Australian stocks <.AXJO> lost 0.08 percent and Japan's Nikkei <.N225> bucked the trend and edged up 0.2 percent.

and the imposed a new round of tariffs on each other's goods on Monday, intensifying a trade dispute that is expected to hit global economic growth.

Global financial markets have been spooked in the past few months as traders and policy makers worried the heated Sino-trade row could chill investment and trade in a blow to world growth.

The Dow <.DJI> fell about 0.7 percent and the <.SPX> slipped 0.35 percent overnight.

The tense backdrop added to the general caution ahead of an expected interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve this week and uncertainty over the future of Rosenstein oversees the investigation into Russia's role in the 2016 [.N]

The Fed begins its two-day policy meeting later on Tuesday.

equities had made strong gains last week as investors had hoped the and would find ways to strike some form of compromise over the trade issues. However, both and showed no signs of backing down, stoking concerns the dispute would drag on for a protracted period.

"Wall Street weakness amid the latest flare up in trade conflict concerns is a negative factor for equities. Some markets, like Japan's, have positive factors to fall back on like the weaker yen, but such support could be negated if the Chinese market is hit by volatility," said Masahiro Ichikawa, at in

Financial markets in China were closed on Monday for a public holiday.

In currencies, the euro traded little changed at $1.1753 .

The single currency had surged to a 3-1/2-month peak of $1.1815 on Monday after said he sees a vigorous pickup in euro zone inflation, backing moves toward unwinding an ECB asset-purchase programme meant to stimulate the

The dollar edged up to a two-month peak of 113.00 yen .

The dollar index against a basket of six major currencies <.DXY> edged up 0.05 percent to 94.229.

The Australian dollar, a proxy of China-related trades and a gauge of broad risk appetite, was effectively flat at $0.7252 after shedding 0.5 percent on Monday.

Brent futures nudged up 0.1 percent to $81.28 a barrel after surging more than 3 percent overnight to $81.48, highest since November 2014.

had rallied after and its biggest outside the group, Russia, ruled out on Sunday any immediate, additional increase in crude output, effectively rebuffing U.S. Donald Trump's calls for action to cool the market.

(Reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)

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

First Published: Tue, September 25 2018. 06:33 IST