Asian stocks hit four-month lows as HK seethes, dollar shines
Tuesday, 30 September 2014 00:01
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Reuters: Asian stocks stumbled to a four-month low on Monday as political unrest in Hong Kong rattled investors, while the US dollar basked in the afterglow of data showing the world’s biggest economy on a strong footing.
Hong Kong shares dropped 2.3% to three-month lows in the worst unrest since China took back control of the former British colony two decades ago.
In Europe, shares prices are expected to rise in sympathy with the rebound in US stocks on Friday following upbeat revised second quarter US growth figures.
Asia, however, failed to ride on Wall Street’s performance, with the MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dropping 1.3%, hitting its lowest level since mid-May.
Even the usually calm Hong Kong-dollar, which is pegged to a narrow band against the US dollar, slipped 0.1% to 7.761 against the greenback, its lowest level since March, as the street clashes affected some banks’ operations.
“We consider the peg (to the U.S. dollar) virtually unbreakable but (today’s fall in the spot price) is a warning that financial markets and the economy are vulnerable to political uncertainty,” said Asia economist at ING Tim Condon.
Offshore yuan traded at 6.1545 to the dollar, slightly weaker than Friday but off the six-week low of 6.1787 hit earlier this month.
Markets in mainland China fared better, with Shanghai shares little changed near 1 1/2-year highs.
Japan’s Nikkei average also rose 0.5%, with the yen’s weakness flattering the export sector.
The dollar index rose as high as 85.779, its highest since July 2010, in early trade after having posted an 11th straight week of gains last week, extending the longest winning streak since its 1971 uncoupling from gold.
The US Commerce Department on Friday raised its estimate of Gross Domestic Product growth to an annualised 4.6%, the fastest pace in 2 1/2 years, and accelerating from the 4.2% reported last month.
The data reinforced the perception that the United States is the brightest spot in the global economy, with the Federal Reserve on course to raise interest rates while other major central banks need to enact more stimulus to support growth.
“Given that the Federal Reserve is on track to normalise its policy, you can’t bid up stocks and bonds too much. In a way, investors had nothing to do but to buy the dollar,” Chief Strategist at Daiwa Securities Tohru Yamamoto said.
The euro dropped to a 22-month low of $ 1.2664 and last stood at $ 1.2667, 0.2% below late US levels on Friday.
Against the yen, the dollar rose to six-year high of 109.74 yen. The Australian dollar dropped to as low as $ 0.8684, its lowest level in almost eight months and coming within sight of its January low of $ 0.8660.The New Zealand dollar also dropped to a one-year low of $ 0.7708 after Reserve Bank of New Zealand data showed that the Central Bank had sold the currency on the open market last month to accelerate its fall from historic highs.