By Swati Pandey and Wayne Cole
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Asian shares suffered their steepest daily drop in 10 months on Monday, as Sino-U.S. trade friction sent the yuan slumping to a more than decade trough and stampeded investors into safe harbors including the yen, bonds and gold.
The panic is likely to spread to Europe and Wall Street with futures signaling sharp losses in their benchmark indices.
The pan-region Euro Stoxx 50
Markets have been badly spooked since U.S. President Donald Trump abruptly declared he would slap 10% tariffs on $300 billion in Chinese imports, ending a month-long trade truce. China vowed on Friday to fight back.
In response, China's yuan
"Everything is selling off right now," said Ray Attrill, head of forex strategy at National Australia Bank in Sydney. "We have no reason to expect any cessation in selling unless we see any strong action to defend any CNY or CNH weakness."
"Our working assumption is that we are unlikely to see any meaningful resolution to the trade dispute anytime soon."
Asian share markets were a sea of red with Japan's Nikkei <.N225> shedding 1.7% to the lowest since early June. It was the sharpest daily drop since March and led Japanese officials to call a special meeting to discuss market turmoil.
Australian shares <.AXJO> slipped about 2% to spend their fourth straight session in the red, and South Korea's KOSPI <.KS11> tumbled 2.6% to hit its lowest since November 2016.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan sank 2.5% to depths not seen since late January. That marked the biggest one-day percentage loss since early October.In China, the blue-chip index <.CSI300> fell 1% while the troubled Hong Kong market <.HSI> hit a seven-month trough.
Oil prices were dragged down on demand worries, while gold climbed 0.8% to $1,452.17 an ounce.
The trade dispute between the world's two largest economies has already disrupted global supply chains and investment.
The abrupt escalation capped a critical week for global markets after the U.S. Federal Reserve delivered a widely anticipated interest rate cut and played down expectations of further easing.
EVER DEEPER CUTS
So far, investors are not buying Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's claim that the 25-basis-point rate reduction was a mere "mid-cycle adjustment to policy".
Futures are now pricing in deeper cuts than before last week's Fed meeting. The terminal U.S. rate is seen at 1.22%, 93 basis points below the current effective rate.
Analysts at TD Securities are forecasting no less than five more cuts from the Fed, amounting to 125 basis points of easing, over the coming year or so.
Bond markets were well ahead of the game as U.S. 10-year yields
German 10-year government bond yields
The flight to safety lifted the yen, which often gains at times of stress thanks to Japan's position as the world's largest creditor. The dollar slipped to a seven-month trough of 105.77 yen
That dragged the dollar index <.DXY> off 0.1%, though it was up against most other Asian currencies and those exposed to China or commodities including the Australian dollar.
The Aussie
The Swiss franc
Sterling
Oil extended losses with U.S crude off 61 cents at $55.05 and Brent down 81 cents at $61.08.
(Editing by Richard Borsuk and Jacqueline Wong)
https://wsau.com/news/articles/2019/aug/05/asian-shares-hit-two-month-lows-as-escalating-sino-us-trade-row-unnerves-markets/924530/?refer-section=national
2019-08-05 03:30:42Z
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