Asian stocks steady on strong U.S. data; Dollar up

Asian stocks steady on strong U.S. data; Dollar up

20 August 2014, 08:58
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On Wednesday Asian stocks were steady after strong U.S. housing data lifted Wall Street shares, helping nudge Treasury yields higher and keeping the dollar to extend gains against the euro and yen.

Spreadbetters expected a slightly lower open for Europe ahead of the Federal Reserve meeting minutes release later in the day. Britain's FTSE was forecast to open as much as 0.1 percent lower, Germany's DAX down 0.1 percent and France's CAX flat.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was flat, treading water through the day.

Tokyo's Nikkei inched up 0.1 percent.

Wall Street drew support from robust housing data on Tuesday, which pushed up Treasury yields and drove the dollar to a nine-month high against the euro.

Riskier assets were also underpinned by receding geopolitical tensions stemming from the Ukraine conflict.

"Risk-on moves continue to take place. Last week it was mostly led by equities, but now it is more widespread, resulting in safe-havens like Treasuries being sold," said Junichi Ishikawa, market strategist at IG Securities in Tokyo.

"The resulting rise in Treasury yields has boosted the dollar, and we are seeing a more comprehensive risk off trend," he said.

The euro hovered close to a nine-month low of $1.3303 reached during the session.

The dollar gained 0.2 percent to 103.12 yen after touching a four-month high of 103.23 yen.

The New Zealand dollar fell to a five-month low as the greenback's strength added to bearish factors including soft dairy prices and investor preference for the neighboring Aussie dollar.

The kiwi fell to as low as $0.8373, last touched in early March.

The 10-year Treasury note yielded 2.406 percent, having risen for the last three days after hitting a 14-month low of 2.303 percent last week.

Strategists at Brown Brothers Harriman said the situation appeared to be developing into two tiers of risk, a lower one focused on ground conflict and a higher one centered on the international diplomatic arena.

"It seems as if markets are now entirely focused on the upper tier of risk, and have come to accept an escalation of the proxy military conflict on the ground between the two countries (Ukraine and Russia)," they wrote in a note to clients.

Later in the day investors will scrutinize the Federal Reserve's minutes from the July 29-30 policy meeting, while looking forward to Fed Chair Janet Yellen's speech on Friday at a gathering of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

The Fed minutes will again be closely watched for any hints on when officials plan to increase U.S. interest rates, with a set of mixed data in recent months keeping traders guessing about the timing of the tightening cycle.

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