Asian Stock Markets
Asian investors dumped shares and drove to the safety of the yen and
gold on Monday amid fears of a global trade war and worries of political
uncertainty in Italy, risks that cloud the outlook for world growth.
The euro still found support after Germany’s Social Democrat party decisively backed the renewal of an alliance with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives, allowing her to form a new government more than five months since the country’s inconclusive election.
Canada and Mexico have threatened retaliation, and the European Union said it would apply 25 percent tariffs on about $3.5 billion of imports from the United States if Trump carried out his threat.
Italian voters delivered a hung parliament on Sunday,
flocking to anti-establishment and far-right parties in record numbers
and casting the euro zone’s third-largest economy into a political
gridlock that could take months to clear.
The euro
traded choppily around $1.2320, easing from a two-week high of $1.2365
as the eurosceptic 5-Star Movement saw its support soar to become the
largest single party, according to projections based on early
vote-counting.
In the United States, President Donald
Trump proposed tariffs on imported steel and aluminium, a pledge that
met with warnings of retaliation from the rest of the world over the
weekend.
The spectre of a global trade war hit risk
appetite, sending MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside
Japan down 0.8 percent to the lowest since mid-February.
U.S. stock futures did not inspire much confidence, with S&P E-Minis down 0.6 percent and Dow futures off 0.4 percent.
The euro still found support after Germany’s Social Democrat party decisively backed the renewal of an alliance with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives, allowing her to form a new government more than five months since the country’s inconclusive election.
The single currency also got a lift from some safe-haven flows, as did the Japanese yen.
The
dollar fell for a fourth straight session to trade around 105.52 yen,
but was slightly above Friday’s low of 105.23, a level not seen since
November 2016.
Canada and Mexico have threatened retaliation, and the European Union said it would apply 25 percent tariffs on about $3.5 billion of imports from the United States if Trump carried out his threat.
China said on Sunday it did not want a trade war
with the United States but will defend its interests, warning that
policies based on“mistaken assumptions” will damage bilateral relations.
Asian markets were a sea of red with Japan’s Nikkei and
South Korea’s KOSPI both down about 1 percent, while Chinese shares
eased too after starting on a positive note.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index slipped 1.4 percent.
Investors will keep an eye on a deluge of data this week,
culminating in the U.S. non-farm payrolls on Friday. The annual opening
of the National People’s Congress in China was another focus for
investors. China’s parliament has kept the economy’s growth target at
6.5 percent for this year.
In commodities, oil prices
climbed ahead of a meeting between OPEC and U.S. shale firms in Houston,
raising expectations that oil producers would discuss further how to
clear a global glut.
Brent crude was up 25 cents at $64.63 a barrel while U.S. light crude added 23 cents to $61.48.
Spot gold climbed 0.3 percent to $1,326.46.

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