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Asian stocks slipped
on Thursday after Wall Street continued to pull back from record highs ahead of
Friday's closely-watched U.S. jobs data, while the nervous euro languished at
an 11-year low prior to the European Central Bank's policy meeting.
MSCI's broadest
index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS shed 0.4 percent with
Thai, Malaysian and Chinese stocks posting losses.
Still,
optimism stemming from widespread monetary easing supported the region's other
stock markets.
"Foreigners
are continuing their buying spree on the back of increased global liquidity
after quantitative easing by the ECB," said Lee Kyung-min, economist at
Daishin Securities Co in Seoul.
In line with
such gains spreadbetters forecast a slightly higher open for Britain's FTSE.FTSE, Germany's DAX .GDAXI and
France's CAC .FCHI.
Risk asset
markets, shored up by liquidity provided by easing-minded central banks around
the world, will have a chance to confirm the ECB's easing stance when it holds
a policy meeting later in the session.
The ECB, which
starts its quantitative easing (QE), or bond-buying, program of more than 1
trillion euros this month, is expected to detail the plan after the meeting.
Edgy before
the ECB's announcement on details of its QE scheme, the euro fell as far as
$1.1055 EUR=, a low not seen since September 2003.
"This
(ECB 1 trillion euro program) would not be so euro negative if the Federal
Reserve were doing the same thing but not only did the U.S. central bank end
its QE last October, but they are looking to take the next step and raise
interest rates," said Kathy Lien, managing director for forex strategy at
BK Asset Management.
"It is
the reminder of this divergence that has driven EUR/USD to fresh 11-year
lows."
The euro's
weakness helped the dollar index .DXY rise to a new 11-year high of 96.114. Expectations
that the Fed would raise rates as early as summer have fueled the dollar's
recent rally. The
global markets will look to Friday's U.S. jobs data for further confirmation
that the world's largest economy is recovering enough to justify a rate hike. Economists
polled by Reuters projected U.S. payrolls grew 240,000 in February, following
growth of 257,000 in January. ECONUS
The dollar
rose 0.2 percent to 119.855 yen JPY,
still some distance from a three-week peak of 120.27 struck earlier in the week
thanks to a spike in U.S. Treasury yields. The 10-year Treasury note yield
US10YT=RR was at 2.117 percent after edging up to a two-week high of 2.142
percent overnight. The Australian dollar received a
slight lift when the Reserve Bank of Australia's deputy governor said the
currency was much closer to an appropriate level than it has been for the past
few years.
In
commodities, U.S. crude oil CLc1 added to overnight gains, rising 0.4 percent
to $51.73 a barrel, and Brent gained 0.1 percent to $60.59 a barrel LCOc1. The
lack of a deal in talks over Iran's nuclear program allayed fears of an
imminent rise in oil supply from the OPEC nation, supporting oil.
The euro held declines against most
major peers as the ECB prepares to buy 60 billion euros of assets a month to
counter slowing growth and the threat of deflation. Norway’s krone slid 0.5
percent, heading for a sixth straight drop, its longest losing streak since
July.
German factory orders unexpectedly
contracted in January from a year before, data today showed, while a similar
gauge from the U.S. is due. Services growth in the euro area fell short of
analysts’ estimates last month, in contrast to strong U.S. data, reports showed
yesterday.
New Zealand’s dollar slipped 0.7
percent to 75.37 U.S. cents, while Australia’s currency was little changed at
78.09 U.S. cents. A stronger Aussie and lower interest rates than the economy
would normally warrant are unavoidable in an environment of international
policy easing, central bank Deputy Governor Philip Lowe said. The
Aussie was up 0.1 percent at $0.7825 AUD=D4. The currency hit a six-year nadir
of $0.7627 early in February after the RBA cut interest rates to a record-low
2.25 percent. The RBA stood pat on policy earlier this week, but observers
expect it to cut rates again sooner or later.
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