Tue May 12,
2015 1:24am EDT Related: GREECE
TOKYO | BY SHINICHI SAOSHIRO
Reuters
Asian
stocks were mostly lower and the euro sagged on Tuesday as barely perctible
progress on talks between debt-strapped Greece and its creditors kept
investors edgy.
Spreadbetters
expected jitters over Greece
to continue weighing on Europe, forecasting a slightly lower open for Britain 's FTSE, Germany 's
DAX and France 's
CAC.
MSCI's
broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.2 percent.
Decliners included shares in South Korea ,
Hong Kong , Malaysia
and Thailand ,
while Chinese equities bucked the trend and rose modestly.
In a
closely-watched Eurogroup meeting on Monday, euro zone finance ministers welcomed
progress in negotiations between Greece and its creditors but said
more work is needed to close a cash-for-reform deal.
"It
acknowledged progress, but any further development will depend on a positive
conclusion to a review of the current program. In other words, the story
remains unchanged," Richard Cochinos, head of Americas G10 FX strategy at
Citi, wrote in a note to clients.
While Greece said on Monday it repaid about 750
million euros to the International Monetary Fund, the absence of a clear breakthrough
in negotiations made it an anxious wait for markets worried that Athens would eventually
run out of cash and default on its debts.
"Barring
an unforeseen shock, Greece
should be able to carry on negotiations into June, but cash positions are low.
Based on our expectations debts will have significant trouble being met beyond
mid-June," Cochinos at Citi said.
Elevated U.S. yields
mean higher borrowing costs that could hurt shares not on just Wall Street but
in many other markets as well.
"We
are potentially at a crossroads. If U.S.
monetary policy begins to tighten, U.S.
equity markets may have trouble rallying, which could translate to some caution
in other equity markets including Japan ,"
said Stefan Worrall, director of equity at Credit Suisse in Tokyo .
Wall Street
shares slipped after the Eurogroup meeting, with the Dow and S&P 500 each
shedding 0.5 percent.
In
currencies, the euro was down 0.2 percent at $1.1183 . The common currency
surged to a two-month high of $1.1392 on Thursday when markets were focused on
improving prospects for the European economy and surging euro zone bond yields.
The dollar
was little changed at 120.19 yen after climbing modestly overnight as U.S.
Treasury yields rose ahead of $64 billion in new debt supply hitting the market
this week. [US/]
The New Zealand
dollar hovered near a two-month low of $0.7328 . Increasing speculation that
the country's central bank would eventually cut rates has recently pummeled the
kiwi.
In
commodities, U.S. crude, which hit a five-month high of $62.58 last week on a
weakening in the dollar, lost 2 cents to $59.23 a barrel on concerns on
overabundant supply. Oil could suffer more losses if the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries monthly report due later in the day shows a rise
in production. [O/R]
(Additional
reporting by Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo ;
Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Eric Meijer)
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