Asian Stock Markets
Asian stocks slipped on Tuesday, their recent recovery stalling after
European equities broke a winning streak, while the dollar edged up to
pull further away from three-year lows.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
shed 0.5 percent. Australian stocks fell 0.3 percent, South Korea’s
KOSPI lost 0.7 percent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 0.85 percent.
Japan’s Nikkei retreated 1.25 percent after three successive days of gains.
The
pan-European STOXX index fell 0.6 percent on Monday following a
three-day ascent, dragged down by falls in consumer staples stocks.
U.S.
markets were closed on Monday for a holiday, and the focus will be on
whether Wall Street can maintain its recovery once trading resumes.
The
Dow gained 4.5 percent last week, winning back more than half of the
territory lost during a sharp downturn earlier in the month.
The
VIX index - Wall Street’s “fear gauge” measure of market volatility -
has slipped below 20, less than half the 50-point peak touched earlier
in February.
The dollar index against a basket of
six major currencies was 0.3 percent higher at 89.348 to put further
distance between a three-year low of 88.253 set on Friday.
The dollar was a shade higher at 106.720 yen and the euro dipped 0.15 percent to $1.2388.
Oil
prices hovered near two-week highs, lifted by tensions in the Middle
East after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that
Israel could act against Iran itself, not just its allies in the
region.
U.S. crude futures were 0.8 percent higher at $62.16 per barrel after touching $62.74, the highest since Feb. 7.Spot gold slipped 0.35 percent to 1,341.24 an ounce, weighed by the dollar’s bounce.

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