Asian stocks slip as China flash PMI disappoints
China manufacturing PMI falls to a seven-month low of 48.3 in February from January’s final reading of 49.5
source by mint
source by mint
Equities
were already on the back foot after minutes of the Federal Reserve’s
latest policy meeting showed it remained on track to taper its stimulus.
Photo: AFP
Tokyo: Asian stocks tumbled on Thursday and the
yen firmed as a survey painted a grim picture of China’s manufacturing
sector, heightening uncertainty about the outlook for the region’s
economic powerhouse.
Equities were already on the back foot after minutes of the Federal
Reserve’s latest policy meeting showed it remained on track to taper its
stimulus.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside
Japan extended losses after the China survey, losing 0.7%, while Japan’s
Nikkei stock average was down 1.2%.
The preliminary China Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI)
from HSBC-Markit for February fell to a seven-month low of 48.3 in
February from January’s final reading of 49.5, as employment fell at the
fastest pace in five years.
“The building-up of disinflationary pressures implies
that the underlying momentum for manufacturing growth could be
weakening,” said Qu Hongbin, chief economist for China at HSBC, in
comments accompanying the PMI data.
“We believe Beijing policymakers should and can fine-tune policy to keep growth at a steady pace in the coming year.”
Signs of weakness in the world’s second-largest economy
was one of the triggers for last month’s selloff of emerging market
assets. A series of PMIs in January showed growth in China’s
manufacturing and services sectors at multi-month or multi-year lows.
However, those disappointing PMI readings were countered
by surprisingly buoyant growth in exports and bank lending, which
suggested that economy was not faring as badly as some feared.
Sentiment in Tokyo was further darkened by data showing
Japan posted a record trade deficit in January, as export growth slowed
and imports outpaced shipments as a weak yen boosted import costs.
On Wall Street on Wednesday, the Dow Jones industrial
average, the Standard and Poor’s 500 Index and the Nasdaq Composite
Index all skidded, following release of the Fed minutes.
The minutes showed members on the Fed’s policy setting
committee emphasized their commitment to trimming the central bank’s
asset-purchase program in predictable $10-billion steps.
John Williams,
president of the San Francisco Fed, said late Wednesday he would only
back an interest rate hike if inflation was closer to 2%, unemployment
was dropping, and gross domestic product growth was “above trend.”
The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes fell to
2.7% after the China flash PMI report, compared with Wednesday’s US
close of 2.7%.
The yen, which often gains in line with investors’
aversion to risk, got a leg up against its rivals after the China flash
PMI report. The dollar’s early gains unravelled and it slipped 0.3% to
¥101.97, moving further away from a two-week high of ¥102.73 hit on
Tuesday.
The euro lost 0.3% to ¥140.16, after it hit a three-week peak above ¥141 on Tuesday.
The dollar index inched lower to 80.135, moving back
toward its Wednesday low of 79.927, which was its weakest since late
December.
The euro added about 0.1% to $1.3741, not far from the
previous session’s high of $1.3773, which was its highest peak since 2
January.
In commodities markets, US crude rose about 0.2% to
$103.47 a barrel, after touching a four-month high on Wednesday after
forecasts for more cold weather next week.
Spot gold was nearly flat at $1,31.49 an ounce, steadying after losing nearly 1% on Wednesday. Reuters
nagesh dubey
pgdm 2nd sem
nagesh dubey
pgdm 2nd sem
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