Most Asian Shares Fall on Lower Oil, Fed Comments--4th Update
03 December 2015 - 7:34PM
Dow Jones News
By Chao Deng
Most Asian shares fell after oil prices slid overnight and
expectations firmed that the Federal Reserve will raise rates after
its December meeting in two weeks.
Australia's S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.6%, South Korea's Kospi fell
0.8% and Japan's Nikkei Stock Average was flat. Hong Kong's Hang
Seng Index fell 0.5%.
The Shanghai Composite Index rose 1.4% after a private gauge of
China's services sector grew in November, albeit at a slower pace.
Signs of slowing growth have stoked hopes of additional
stimulus.
"We're seeing money withdrawn from these markets by U.S. based
investors, " said Andrew Sullivan, managing director at Haitong
Securities International. Many "prefer having money in the U.S. [if
rates increase] even though the hike is going to be very
small."
Lower oil--which regained some ground during Asian trading--and
the prospect of higher U.S. interest rates are outweighing hopes
for additional stimulus from the European Central Bank. Economists
and market watchers expect the central bank to reduce its deposit
rate further into negative territory and add to its EUR60 billion
($63.5 billion) a month bond-buying program after its meeting later
Thursday.
The euro weakened to $1.0592 in afternoon trading, compared with
$1.0614 late Wednesday in New York.
Energy shares on the S&P/ASX 200 dropped by 3% while
materials stocks fell 2.2%. Miners BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto
Ltd. fell 3% and 2.1%, respectively. Woodside Petroleum Ltd. fell
3.8% and Oil Search Ltd. fell 2.2%.
Brent crude gained 1.4% to $43.10 in Asia Thursday after sliding
4.4% to a six-year low a day earlier.
Oil and energy stocks could continue to swing ahead of Friday's
meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries,
which is expected to be one of the most contentious in years. The
group decided last year not to cut output in a bid to defend market
share against increased competition from the U.S., a policy that
accelerated a price rout in oil.
Meanwhile, the dollar rose after Federal Reserve Chairwoman
Janet Yellen said that the U.S. economy appeared to be
strengthening, a signal the central bank could raise rates soon.
Going forward, market participants will assess U.S. nonfarm payroll
data on Friday.
The Wall Street Journal Dollar Index, which gauges the dollar
against a basket of 16 currencies, last traded at 90.80 in Asia,
after rising as high as 91.02 overnight, its strongest level since
December 2002.
Higher interest rates in the U.S. would raise borrowing costs
and threatens to curtail a broad rally in global stocks during an
era of ultralow rates.
A strengthening dollar also pressured copper and other base
metals, which are priced in the currency. These assets typically
become more expensive to buy for other currency holders when the
dollar strengthens.
Copper futures settled down 1.9% at $2.033 a pound on the Comex
division of the New York Mercantile Exchange on Wednesday. Among
the other base metals, aluminum was flat at $1,442 a ton, zinc was
down 0.9% at $1,531 a ton and nickel was up 1.2% at $8,440 a
ton.
Iron-ore prices last traded at $40.60 a ton, as analysts expect
they are likely to fall to fresh decade lows.
In China, shares in Shanghai traded slightly higher after the
Caixin nonmanufacturing purchasing mangers index fell to 51.2 in
November from 52 the previous month. Despite the decline, the
reading remains above the 50-level that indicates expansion.
Earlier this week, an official gauge of manufacturing activity
dropped to its lowest level since August 2012.
In currencies, the Australian dollar traded at $0.7317,
relatively flat from Wednesday, when it reached its strongest level
against the U.S. dollar in 1 1/2 months on Wednesday at
$0.7342.
Gold hit a fresh six-year low earlier in Asia trade on a
strengthening dollar. The yellow metal last traded down 0.1% at
$1,052.30 a troy ounce.
Write to Chao Deng at Chao.Deng@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 03, 2015 03:19 ET (08:19 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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