Tuesday, 24 November 2015

Asia stocks stumble on geopolitical tensions, oil retreats

Passersby walk past in front of stock quotation board outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, September 29, 2015.  REUTERS/Issei Kato

Source: REUTERS

Asian stocks were on edge on Wednesday with most markets stumbling as geopolitical tensions flared after Turkey downed a Russian fighter jet, while crude oil prices eased from two-week highs.
Australian shares dipped 0.5 percent . South Korea's Kospi .KS11 lost 0.2 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng .HSI dropped 0.5 percent. Japan's Nikkei .N225 shed 0.5 percent.
Adding to investor nervousness that followed the attacks on Paris earlier this month, Turkey shot down a Russian aircraft near the Syrian border on Tuesday, saying the jet had violated its air space. It was one of the most serious publicly acknowledged clashes between a NATO member country and Russia for half a century.
"The individual impact on the market from those events like the Paris attacks and heightened security in Brussels may be small, but there is also uncertainty that's worrying investors," said Masaru Hamasaki, head of market & investment information department at Amundi Japan.
"The stock market does not like uncertainty," Hamasaki said.

Still, some of the markets in the region managed to hold their own even as the tense backdrop kept buyers at bay. Shanghai shares edged up 0.1 percent .SSEC and Malaysian stocks also posted modest gains.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS stood flat.
"The conclusion would be Russia would not want to take this too much further at a time when its economy is seeing some green shoots after the past two years of sanctions," said Evan Lucas, market strategist at IG in Melbourne, adding that Turkey is Russia's second-biggest energy customer.
The incident briefly sparked oil supply fears and sent crude prices surging overnight to 2-week highs.
U.S. crude CLc1 was down 0.2 percent at $42.78 a barrel after jumping nearly 3 percent on Tuesday.
The overnight jump in crude favoured commodity currencies such as the Australian dollar. The Aussie AUD=D4 hovered near a 1-month high of $0.7276.
The Canadian dollar fetched C$1.3285 CAD=D4 to the greenback after pulling away from a 2-month low of C$1.3436 struck earlier this week.
The U.S. dollar was lower, hurt in part as the latest flare up in geopolitical tensions stoked demand for safe-haven Treasuries and drove their yields lower. The benchmark 10-year U.S. note yield US10YT=RR stood at 2.239 percent after touching a 3-week low of 2.206 percent overnight.
The dollar index .DXY fell to 99.427, retreating from an 8-month peak of 100.000 set on Monday.
Against the yen, the greenback dipped to a 1-1/2 week low of 122.27 JPY=.
The euro EUR= gained 0.2 percent to $1.0668.
Prices of metals such as zinc, copper and nickel, which had recently plumbed multi-year lows, bounced on the back of the dollar's retreat. A stronger dollar makes dollar-denominated metals more expensive for buyers. [MET/L]
Still, industrial metals are seen remaining under pressure in the long run with an expected Federal Reserve interest rate hike in December likely to underpin the dollar.

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