Global Markets: Asian shares pause amid concerns over growth and trade

Reuters  |  TOKYO 

By Hideyuki Sano

Spreadbetters expected European stocks to open lower, with Britain's FTSE losing 0.3 percent, Germany's DAX slipping 0.2 percent and France's CAC shedding 0.4 percent.

MSCI's broadest index of shares outside dipped 0.15 percent, stalling after climbing to a seven-week high on Monday.

The Shanghai Composite Index was last down 0.15 percent, having flitted in and out of the red.

Australian stocks lost 0.25 percent and Japan's Nikkei shed 0.1 percent.

On Wall Street, the S&P 500, the Nasdaq and the Dow all posted their biggest one-day percentage drops since Jan. 3 on Tuesday.

Following a sharp drop in December, shares gained through much of January, supported in part by expectations for a thaw in U.S.-trade tensions and a more dovish-sounding Federal Reserve. That also prompted global investors to plough into riskier assets.

But putting a dent on sentiment again was a report by that the had rejected an offer from for preparatory trade talks this week ahead of high-level negotiations scheduled for next week.

denied the report, helping equities pare some losses though the fresh concerns about U.S.-relations kept share prices in check.

Recently published data all pointed to a rough year ahead for the world

U.S. home sales tumbled 6.4 percent in December, falling short of the weakest forecast, to their lowest in three years. Compared with a year earlier, they were down more than 10 percent for the first time since 2011.

House price increases slowed sharply, adding to evidence of a further loss of momentum in the housing market.

Canadian factory sales and wholesale trade both slumped more than expected in November, while in a survey by the ZEW research institute showed morale among German investors improved slightly in January, but their assessment of the economy's current condition deteriorated to a four-year low.

Japan's exports and imports also fell short of market expectations, with exports posting their biggest fall in more than two years.

As expected the Bank of kept monetary policy easy and trimmed its forecast on Wednesday with the domestic facing headwinds.

"The downward revision to its forecasts underlines that policy tightening remains a very distant prospect," wrote Marcel Thieliant, senior at

The IMF trimmed its global growth forecasts for 2019 and 2020 on Monday, in its second downgrade in three months, just after China reported its 2018 growth slipped to the worst level in nearly three decades.

"Risk asset prices have been essentially supported just by easing of U.S. rate hike expectations," said Shuji Shirota, at

"Economic data has been weak and the shutdown should be hurting economic sentiment, but even that has been considered as positive for risk assets, on the grounds that they make it difficult for the Fed to raise rates."

U.S. bond prices have found support, with the benchmark 10-year yield slipping to 2.744 percent from Friday's peak of 2.799 percent, the highest since Dec. 27, with market futures pricing out any chance of a Fed rate hike this year.

The euro was a shade higher at $1.1368 but remained in close reach of a three-week low of $1.1336 set on Tuesday, weighed by recent weakness in the euro zone and worries about fallout from Brexit.

The dollar rose 0.25 percent to 109.73 yen , recovering the previous day's losses.

In commodities, U.S. Intermediate (WTI) crude futures managed to crawl up 0.17 percent to $53.1 per barrel after shedding 1.9 percent the previous day.

(Additional reporting by in Tokyo; Editing by and Jacqueline Wong)

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

First Published: Wed, January 23 2019. 11:44 IST