Asia stocks slip on economy fears | Inquirer Business

Asia stocks slip on economy fears

/ 10:51 PM August 09, 2011

HONG KONG—Asian stocks mostly fell Tuesday, extending recent losses amid fears about the global economy, but well off the troughs seen earlier as dealers looked to a key meeting of the US Fed later in the day.

Gold soared to record levels and crude prices fell as Asian stocks plunged in the morning, despite G7 and G20 pledges to bolster the global economy and European Central Bank action on eurozone debt.

However, hopes the US central bank could outline plans for a new stimulus package later Tuesday provided support to investors who had gone into selling mode after the US debt downgrade by Standard & Poor’s last week.

ADVERTISEMENT

Tokyo ended 1.68 percent, or 153.08 points, lower at 8,944.48 – after tumbling 4.40 percent at one point – while Hong Kong swung wildly and closed down 5.66 percent, losing 1,159.87 points to 19,330.70.

FEATURED STORIES

Seoul closed 3.63 percent, or 68.10 percent lower at 1,801.35 – staging a huge rebound after falling about 9.9 percent in the morning.

Taipei fell 0.79 percent, or 59.68 points, to 7,493.12, having earlier shed five percent.

However, Sydney staged a massive turnaround after slumping five percent in morning trade. The market closed 1.22 percent, or 4.87 points, up at 4,034.8.

And Shanghai bounced back to close flat after data showed inflation had edged up slightly. The Shanghai Composite Index edged down 0.75 points to 2,526.07.

“There seems to be some optimism coming through markets that Ben Bernanke might outline plans for a QE3 package this evening,” said IG Markets analyst Ben Potter.

“Even if he does mention this, there will be a lot of speculation as to whether or not it will actually make much difference given the wildly divergent views as to the effectiveness of the previous packages.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Fear continued to dominate after the historic downgrade of the United States by Standard & Poor’s on Friday and a warning from the head of the European Commission Thursday that the debt crisis in the eurozone had likely spilt over into other economies.

“S&P’s downgrade of the US credit rating is yet another demand from Wall Street for QE3 (quantitative easing), which their own private bank, the Federal Reserve, will no doubt deliver shortly,” said a fund manager at Grand Private Equities Wesley Legrand.

Shanghai reversed its losses after China announced inflation had hit 6.5 percent in July, a more than three-year high, amid hopes that the price rises had levelled out and the government would ease up on its rate hikes.

Asian stocks slumped on opening after Wall Street suffered its steepest one-day drop since late 2008 on Monday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average falling 5.55 percent, the broader S&P 500 down 6.7 percent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq diving 6.9 percent.

Gold, viewed as a safe haven in financial turmoil, ended at $1,753-$1,754 an ounce in Hong Kong after hitting a record high $1,772.09 earlier in the day.

The greenback dropped to 77.25 yen in Tokyo afternoon trade from 77.68 yen in New York late Monday. The euro climbed to $1.4243 from $1.4179, but fell to 110.10 yen from 110.23 yen.

The debt fears also weighed on the Australian dollar, which briefly fell below parity with the greenback for the first time since the Japanese earthquake in March.

In afternoon trade the “Aussie” was at 99.42 US cents, down from 103.55 cents on Monday but it later returned to 102.14.

On oil markets New York crude sank below $80 in Asian trade and its Brent counterpart briefly dropped under $100.

New York’s main contract, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) light sweet crude for delivery in September shed $2.35, or 2.89 percent, to $78.96 per barrel at 0600 GMT, a level it has not seen since September 30, 2010.

WTI prices had plunged $5.60, or 6.89 percent, to a low of $75.71 in intra-day trade before clawing back some ground.

Brent North Sea crude for September delivery slipped $1.82, or 1.75 percent, to $101.92. It had earlier sunk below $100, a level it had not breached since February 8.

In other markets:

— Manila ended 4.02 percent, or 174.21 points, lower at 4,157.03.

The fall is the index’s biggest since March 16, 2009.

Philippine Long Distance Telephone closed five percent lower at 2,244 pesos, Aboitiz Equity declined 3.3 percent to 38.65 pesos and San Miguel dived 4.3 percent to 114 pesos.

— Wellington fell 2.75 percent, or 87.67 points, to 3,097.78.

Telecom Corp fell 4.6 percent to NZ$2.37, Fletcher Building slid 3.7 percent to NZ$7.20 and Air New Zealand was flat at NZ$1.08.

— Kuala Lumpur ended down 1.66 percent, or 24.85 points, to close at 1,472.14.

Telecommunications company Axiata Group lost 1.0 percent to 4.94 ringgit, while financial firm Malayan Banking fell 0.9 percent to 8.55. Construction and plantation group IJM Corp gained 0.7 percent to 5.87 ringgit.

— Jakarta shed 2.99 percent, or 115.15 points, to close at 3,735.11.

Heavyweight Telekomunikasi Indonesia fell 4.0 percent to 7,200 rupiah, while Bank Mandiri dropped 2.0 percent to IDR7,200.

— Bangkok plunged 3.31 percent, or 35.65 points, to close at 1,042.54.

Banpu fell 26 baht to 670, and PTT Plc dropped 11 to 311 baht.

— Singapore’s stock market was closed.

— Mumbai fell 0.78 percent, or 132.27 points, to close at 16,857.91.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

Steel producer Tata Steel was down 4.87 percent at 486.05 rupees, while sister firm Tata Motors slid 4.33 percent.

TAGS: Asia, Finance, Foreign Exchange, gold, oil, Stock Activity, stocks

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By continuing, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. To find out more, please click this link.