By Shinichi Saoshiro
TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian stocks
slipped on Thursday, giving back earlier gains as initial cheer from a
rebound on Wall Street fizzled out, while the New Zealand dollar hit a
one-year low after the central bank governor decried the currency's
recent strength.
Spreadbetters
expected a steady start for Europe, forecasting Britain's FTSE (.FTSE)
to open virtually flat, and Germany's DAX (.GDAXI) and France's CAX
(.FCHI) to both edge up 0.1 percent.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.4 percent after touching a four-month low.
Tokyo's
Nikkei (.N225) retained earlier momentum and rose 1.1 percent, with
investors encouraged bt=y the yen resuming its slide against the dollar.
Wall
Street rebounded broadly overnight, buoyed by strong U.S. housing data
and dovish statements from a top Federal Reserve official.
The
New Zealand dollar hit a one-year low of $0.7986 (NZD=D4) after Reserve
Bank of New Zealand Governor Graeme Wheeler repeated his warning that
the exchange rate is unsustainable and at unjustified levels.
"The
statement itself was another intervention threat. The Reserve Bank is
saying that even down at these levels the kiwi is too high," said Imre
Speizer, currency strategist at Westpac.
The kiwi had climbed to a three-year peak of $0.8839 in July, boosted by prospects of further rate hikes by the RBNZ.
The
U.S. dollar, rejuvenated after benchmark U.S. Treasury yields rose for
the first time in four days and as the euro slumped to fresh lows, edged
closer to a six-year high versus the yen.
The dollar traded as high as 109.34 yen (JPY=), and a break above 109.46 would take the greenback to levels unseen since 2008.
The
dollar index, a gauge of the greenback's strength against a basket of
major currencies, hit a four-year high of 85.169 (.DXY).
The
euro slumped to a fresh 14-month trough of 1.2762 (EUR=), retaining
downward momentum after dropping overnight on poor German data and
statements by European Central Bank President Mario Draghi indicating
monetary policy would be kept loose for an extended period.
The
Australian dollar fell to $0.8813 (AUD=D4), its lowest since early
February, suffering collateral damage from the kiwi's sharp fall.
For
immediate cues the financial markets are eyeing U.S. jobless claims and
durable goods numbers due later in the day for potential impact on
yields and currencies.
In
a week filled with appearances by U.S. central bank officials,
investors await Atlanta Fed president Dennis Lochart's speech due at
1730 GMT.
In
commodities, Brent crude steadied near $97 a barrel after bouncing from
its lowest in 26 months, but abundant supply continued to drag on
prices. [O/R]
Brent (LCOc1) was down 21 cents at 96.74 a barrel.
Gold
extended losses, reacting to stronger equities and robust U.S. economic
data that curbed its safe-haven appeal, and the metal looked likely to
fall back towards January's lows as the dollar index rallied to
four-year highs.
Spot gold (XAU=) dipped 0.2 percent to $1,214.27 an ounce.
(Additional Reporting by Ian Chua, Naomi Tajitusu in Sydney and Wellington; Editing by Eric Meijer and Simon Cameron-Moore)
沒有留言:
張貼留言