HONG KONG: Asian
markets fell in morning trade Wednesday, following a decline on Wall
Street and amid renewed scepticism over eurozone efforts to stem the
debt crisis.
Tokyo was down 0.37 per cent, Hong Kong slipped 0.25
per cent and Seoul was off 0.36 per cent. Sydney was flat, slipping
0.05 per cent, as was Shanghai which edged down 0.03 per cent.
US
stocks closed sharply lower on Tuesday on concerns over American
corporate earnings and a slump in confidence registered by a US
small-business survey.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped
0.65 per cent, while The S&P 500 fell 0.81 per cent and the
tech-rich Nasdaq slipped 1.00 per cent.
Meanwhile, concerns over
the eurozone overshadowed the bloc's deal Tuesday to help Spain with 30
billion euros ($37 billion) this month for its distressed banks and an
extension to a deadline to cut its public deficit.
"There is a
broad framework to deal with the crisis, but uncertainty remains over
whether it will work," said Kenichi Hirano, operating officer at
Tachibana Securities.
"Participants will likely maintain their wait-and-see approach over the European situation."
Rates
of return on Spain's benchmark 10-year bonds eased Tuesday after the
deal at a meeting of eurozone finance ministers, slipping to 6.778 per
cent, sharply lower than the danger level of 7.023 per cent at close the
previous day.
But analysts remained sceptical, warning that
European leaders may have once again done too little too late to
convince the markets.
"There is really little here that will get
Spanish yields to fall to any great degree and there remain questions
over how quickly anything can be done in order to bring yields lower,"
said Derek Halpenny at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi.
Analysts are
also concerned Germany's top court could delay ratification of a
permanent eurozone rescue fund, the European Stability Mechanism, which
is to be used to recapitalise Spanish banks, easing pressure on public
bonds.
The constitutional court was expected to rule by the end
of the month whether the president should be permitted under
constitutional law to sign the legislation into law, but has hinted at a
possible further delay.
On currency markets, the euro edged up
to $1.2261 in Asian trade compared with $1.2251 in New York late
Tuesday. It had dived to a new two-year dollar low in Tuesday European
trade of $1.2235.
The common currency was at 97.27 yen, in line with 97.26 yen in New York. The dollar slipped to 79.31 yen against 79.41 yen.
Trade
was slow Wednesday, with concerns about China also weighing on markets
as investors awaited more key data later in the week, including
second-quarter GDP, to gauge how fast the world's second-largest economy
is slowing.
Oil prices rose on bargain-hunting. New York's main
contract, light sweet crude for August delivery, gained 28 cents to
$84.19 a barrel and Brent North Sea crude for delivery in August rose 28
cents to $98.25.
Gold was worth 1574.60 an ounce at 0310 GMT, compared with $1,593.10 late Tuesday.
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