Asian Stock Markets
Asian shares stepped back in cautious trade on Monday as investors look
to see whether U.S. Republicans can hammer out a tax reform deal
quickly, while the British pound fell on growing doubts over Prime
Minister Theresa May’s leadership.
European shares are expected to be largely unchanged. Spread betters expect France's CAC .FCHI and Germany's DAX .GDAXI to open almost flat, while Britain's FTSE .FTSE is seen rising 0.3 percent from Friday's six-week low.
Tokyo's benchmark Nikkei .N225
dropped 0.9 percent, bringing down MSCI's Asia-Pacific Index
.MIAP00000PUS 0.5 percent. Excluding Japan, shares in the region
.MIAPJ0000PUS were down just 0.1 percent, with mainland Chinese shares
.CSI rising as much as 0.6 percent to two-year highs.
The S&P 500 index .SPX
had ended its eight-week winning streak By Friday's Wall Street close
as investors took their profits after U.S. Senate Republicans had
unveiled a new tax plan that differed from the House of Representatives'
version.
There are few signs of a compromise
yet, with the head of the House of Representatives’ tax-writing
committee opposing a proposal from Senate Republicans that would hike
taxes for some middle class Americans.
In the currency market, the dollar was also shackled by the uncertainty over the fate of the tax cut plans.The euro EUR= traded at $1.1647, down slightly after showing its first weekly gain in four weeks last week.The dollar fetched 113.42 yen JPY=, more than a full yen below its near seven-month high of 114.735 yen touched a week ago.The British pound GBP=D4
came under renewed pressure, slipping 0.5 percent to $1.3120 after the
Times newspaper reported on Sunday that 40 Conservative lawmakers had
agreed to sign a letter of no confidence in May.
Most
emerging market currencies were stable though the South African rand
was the exception, falling to one-year low of 14.44 per dollar on fears
its credit rating would be downgraded.
Elsewhere, bitcoin fell to as low as $5,555 BTC=BTSP
on Sunday, logging a weekly fall of 22 percent, its biggest since early
July as some traders dumped it for a clone called Bitcoin Cash.
The
digital currency bounced back 6 percent on Monday to trade at $6,255,
still down more than 21 percent from its record high of $7,888 touched
on Wednesday.
Oil prices held firm, propped up by concerns about the political instability in Saudi Arabia.
The
news of a pipeline explosion in Bahrain, which Bahraini authorities
said was caused by “terrorist” sabotage, are fanning worries about
mounting tensions between Saudi Arabia and its Sunni allies and Shiite
Iran.
Brent futures LCOc1 traded at $63.50 per barrel, flat on the day and not far from their two-year peak of $64.65 set last week. U.S. crude futures CLc1 were also flat at $56.75.Traders
were also keeping a wary eye on Venezuela, as the cash-strapped OPEC
nation will hold a keenly-awaited meeting with investors to discuss
renegotiating $60 billion in foreign debt on Monday.

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