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Asia shares sag on caution, dollar consolidates

Published 09/27/2015, 11:51 PM
Updated 09/27/2015, 11:59 PM
© Reuters. Pedestrians holding their mobile phone walk past an electronic board showing the various stock prices outside a brokerage in Tokyo

By Shinichi Saoshiro

TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian stocks sagged on Monday after Wall Street's uninspiring Friday performance and ahead of key economic indicators, while the dollar consolidated its gains against the yen and euro.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (MIAPJ0000PUS) stood virtually flat. Shanghai shares (SSEC) fell 0.3 percent. Financial markets in South Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan were closed Monday for public holidays.

Tokyo's Nikkei (N225) lost 1.1 percent on caution ahead of coming announcements including Wednesday's Japan industrial production, Thursday's China Caixin Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) and U.S. non-farm payrolls on Friday.

"Investors would not take large positions until they digest the outcomes of these key data, so directionless trading is expected this week and volume is likely to be thin," said Takuya Takahashi, a strategist at Daiwa Securities in Tokyo.

"If these data are better than expected, the market will likely start recovering next week."

On Friday, the S&P 500 (SPX) erased an early Federal Reserve-driven rally and closed slightly lower amid a selloff in biotech shares, and the Nasdaq (IXIC) lost 1 percent. The Dow (DJI), however, managed to rise 0.7 percent. (N)

Fed Chair Janet Yellen on Thursday revived prospects of an interest rate hike before year-end, easing concerns about slowing global growth that helped the dollar and risk assets, which have been buffeted by fears over China's sputtering economy.

Strong second quarter U.S. GDP data released on Friday further sharpened the case for the Fed to raise rates in 2015.

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Focus now turns to this Friday's U.S. non-farm payrolls as the markets try to gauge whether labor market conditions are strong enough for the Fed to tighten monetary policy.

The dollar was little changed at 120.48 yen

The euro was also steady, at $1.1187

"In terms of price action, we uphold our view of further dollar outperformance versus the emerging market currencies as risk premia remains elevated on China growth, outflows, and policy opacity concerns," wrote strategists at Barclays (LONDON:BARC).

"Compared with developed countries, we expect the dollar to appreciate particularly vis-a-vis the euro, as we think the European Central Bank will have to ease monetary conditions at some point before year-end in order to meet its inflation target."

In commodities, the lacklustre mood in equity markets spilled over and U.S. crude oil futures (CLc1) lost 0.6 percent to $45.42 a barrel while Brent crude (LCOc1) lost 0.9 percent to $48.15 a barrel.

Copper edged higher but were still stuck near one-month lows. Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange had edged up 0.4 percent to $5,044.50 a tonne. Prices hit four-week lows on Thursday near the $5,000-mark and are within reach of a six-year low of $4,855 reached last month.

"The recoveries we've seen over the past couple of months, have been pretty short-lived," said strategist Daniel Hynes of ANZ in Sydney.

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"It highlights the increasing cautiousness around China's growth and what it means for copper despite what the supply side is doing. The PMI will be pretty key this week."

Gold treaded water after being hit by a stronger dollar. Spot gold

Platinum, drubbed recently on fears demand for the metal used in diesel engines would diminish in the wake of the Volkswagen (XETRA:VOWG) emissions scandal, dipped 0.1 percent to $942.25 an ounce

(This story corrects the third paragraph to make the release day for Japan industrial production data as Wednesday, not Tuesday)

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