Asia Stock markets
Stock markets in Asia extended Wall Street’s overnight rout on Friday,
with investors spooked by the specter of a global trade war after
President Donald Trump said the United States would impose hefty tariffs
on imported steel and aluminum.
Brent futures traded at $63.85 per barrel after having hit a two-week low of $63.19.
Trump said duties of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on
aluminum would be formally announced next week, sparking concerns of
retaliatory moves from major trade partners such as China, Europe and
neighboring Canada.
European
shares look set to fall, with spreadbetters expecting Germany’s Dax to
shed 0.9 percent to approach last month’s five-month low, France’s Cac
to drop 0.7 percent and Britain’s FTSE 0.6 percent.
MSCI’s
broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dropped 0.9
percent, while Japan’s Nikkei tumbled 2.5 percent.
For the week, they
are down 2.1 percent and 3.3 percent respectively.
Shares in Asian steelmakers slid, with South Korea’s Posco falling 3.3 percent and Japan’s Nippon Steel down 3.8 percent.
Toyota
Motor shares were down 2.4 percent after the automaker said the
planned tariffs would substantially raise the production costs and
therefore prices of cars and trucks sold in America.
In China, Shanghai composite index dropped 0.6 percent.
On Wall Street, the S&P 500 lost 36.16 points, or 1.33
percent, to 2,677.67 on Thursday, coming a day after investors sold off
heavily on worries the Federal Reserve might increase rates more than
expected this year.
Trump’s latest trade salvo comes
after Washington slapped steep tariffs on imports of solar panels and
washing machines in January, prompting China to launch an anti-dumping
and anti-subsidy investigation into imports of sorghum from the United
States.
The anxiety over tit-for-tat moves was
underscored by Canada’s quick response, with officials in Ottawa saying
they will retaliate against any U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum
products.
Markets are already fretting about the tempo
of U.S. rate hikes this year, and now added to that is the fear
escalating trade protectionism could dent global growth and corporate
earnings - key drivers of last year’s rally in equities .
Concerns over a harmful trade war eclipsed upbeat U.S.
economic data published on Thursday, including a rise in the
manufacturing index to 14-year highs and another showing the number of
Americans filing for unemployment benefits hitting a 48-year low.
U.S.
Treasury yields fell as the risk of a trade war appeared to push aside
considerations of inflation, a major theme that spooked global financial
markets earlier this year.
The 10-year U.S. Treasuries
yield fell to 2.811 percent, hitting its lowest level in three weeks and
further extending the distance from its four-year peak of 2.957 percent
touched on Feb 21.
Some say, on the other hand, markets may be over-reacting.
In the currency market, the
dollar’s rebound following the bullish comments on the U.S. economy
from new Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Tuesday lost momentum.
The euro jumped back to $1.2271, after having hit a seven-week low of $1.21545 on Thursday.
The
yen got an additional boost when Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda
said he would mull an exit from the BOJ’s current stimulus regime if
the central bank’s 2 percent inflation target is achieved in 2019.
The dollar dropped 0.4 percent to 105.79 yen, edging back towards its 15-month low of 105.545 set on Feb 16.
The dollar index is down 2.1 percent this year, dogged by
suspicions that the Trump administration prefers a weaker dollar to help
narrow the United States’s yawning trade deficit.
Worries
that Trump’s big tax cuts and spending plans will ramp up fiscal
deficits to the extent that they undermine confidence in U.S. debt have
also hurt the greenback.
Oil prices were also under pressure, having fallen more than 1 percent the previous day on trade friction fears.
U.S.
crude was little changed in late Asian trade at $60.93 per barrel,
having fallen to two-week low of $60.18 on Thursday. It is down 3.7
percent so far this week.

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