Asian Stock Markets
Asian shares were hammered again on Monday as fears of a trade war
between the United States and China took their toll, but the safe haven
yen came off its highs and U.S. stock futures climbed as investors saw
some light at the end of the tunnel.
Spot gold XAU= was flat at $1,346.8199 an ounce.
Global markets were shaken when U.S. President Donald Trump
moved to slap tariffs on Chinese goods, on top of import duties on steel
and aluminium, prompting a defiant response from Beijing.
But
E-Mini futures for the S&P 500 .ESc1 brushed off the gloom on
Monday to leap 0.6 percent on reports the United States and China have
quietly started negotiating to improve U.S. access to Chinese markets.
The United States also agreed to exempt
South Korea from steel tariffs, imposing instead a quota on steel
imports as the two countries renegotiate their trade deal.
The positive headlines were little consolation for Asian shares which were left nursing their wounds.
Japan's Nikkei .N225 trimmed early losses but were still down 0.4 percent. Chinese shares declined about 1.7 percent. SSEC .CSI300
MSCI’s
broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS
slipped 0.4 percent for its fourth consecutive day in the red.
The
index is headed for its first quarterly decline since late 2016 as the
risk of faster U.S. rate rises and a trade war spooked investors who had
enjoyed a multi-year bull run.
South Korea's benchmark share index .KS11
rose 0.3 percent, one of only three markets in positive territory.
"Protectionism remains a source of volatility and downside risk for
equities," analysts at JPMorgan said in a note.
“Asia
ex-Japan equity outperformance is in part a function of faster growth
and capital inflows - both clearly at risk in a trade war.”
In the uncertain global economic climate, investors looked to pile into the Japanese yen JPY=, traditionally a safe haven asset thanks to the country's massive current account surplus.
Speculators
added short dollar bets to their portfolios, taking the net short
position to its highest in more than a year, according to calculations
by Reuters and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for the week to
March 20.Short yen positions were cut to the smallest since November
2016.
By late Asian trade, the yen had eased slightly
from near 16-month highs to 104.90 per dollar while the Australian and
New Zealand dollars, a liquid proxy for China plays, staged a welcome
rebound.
The Aussie AUD= was up 0.3 percent while the kiwi NZD= gained 0.6 percent.
The dollar index .DXY tracking the greenback against six other major currencies was near a one-month low at 89.423.
In
commodities, international Brent crude futures LCOcv1 opened above $70
per barrel for the first time since January but the gains could not be
sustained as the ongoing trade disputes weighed on global markets. [O/R]
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