|
 
|
Asian stock markets drop early Tuesday; gold scales another peak
Asian stock markets drop early Tuesday; gold scales another peak
SINGAPORE, Aug 9 - Asian stock markets nosedived on Tuesday and the Swiss franc held near a record high, as investors dumped riskier assets in a global rout triggered by fears that political leaders are failing to tackle debt crises in Europe and the United States.
Major indexes across the region fell between 2 and 5 percent, following drop of more than 6 percent on Wall Street in the first trading session since the historic downgrade of the United States’ AAA credit rating by Standard & Poor’s. [.N]
The panicked flight-to-safety pushed gold to the latest in a string of record peaks, boosted the Swiss franc and the yen and lifted Japanese government bonds and, ironically, U.S. Treasuries -- the asset directly affected by the downgrade.
“Market players are seeking emergency refuge and fleeing to safe assets,” said a customer trader at a major Japanese bank in Tokyo. “In the money market, where there is heightened demand for dollars, dollar lenders are running away.”
While the U.S. downgrade late on Friday was the most obvious blow to confidence, investors have also been spooked by data suggesting the U.S. economy could slip back into recession and Europe’s ever-worsening sovereign debt crisis.
There are also concerns about China’s inflation rate, which analysts fear could curb Beijing’s ability to stimulate demand to offset a global slowdown.
China will release inflation data for July later on Tuesday and markets would be reassured by a number that’s little changed or lower than the previous month, traders say.
“We’re in a skittish market and the market is looking for some sort of circuit break. Chinese data today might potentially do it,” said Grant Turley, senior currency strategist at ANZ in Sydney. |
|