Asian stock markets edge down on Europe fears
Thursday, 29 December 2011
HONG KONG, Dec 28 (AFP): Asian markets mostly slipped on Wednesday as unease over the eurozone debt crisis overshadowed a strong rise in consumer confidence in the United States.
On the first full day of trade after Christmas eyes were on Italy, which will hold a debt auction later amid weakened confidence after lenders in Europe deposited a record amount with the central bank rather than lend to each other.
Tokyo fell 0.20 per cent, or 16.94 points, to 8,423.62, Sydney fell 1.25 per cent, or 51.6 points, to 4,088.8 and Seoul shed 0.92 per cent, giving up 16.90 points to 1,825.12.
Hong Kong slipped 0.59 per cent, or 110.50 points, to 18,518.67, although Shanghai staged an afternoon rally to end up 0.18 per cent, or 3.81 points, at 2,170.01.
Dealers were given a positive cue from the United States, where another batch of upbeat data indicated a brighter outlook for the world's biggest economy.
The Conference Board reported a strong surge in consumer confidence this month, with its monthly index surging back to its levels of early 2011 after the collective mood soured deeply in the middle of the year.
"This is traditionally a good time of the year for equities, but we have 20 billion euros of Italian government debt being auctioned in the next two days, so there is some event risk which will probably cap any gains," IG Markets institutional dealer Chris Weston said.
Italy's bond auction is seen as a gauge of whether Rome's debt will be purchased by European banks after the European Central Bank's cash infusion last week.
The yields on benchmark 10-year bonds are sitting at the crucial seven per cent level seen as unsustainable for governments to service their debts.
Adding to investor concerns about a possible credit crunch in Europe was news that the region's banks deposited a record amount of overnight funds at the European Central Bank Monday.
Lenders put 411.8 billion euros ($535 billion) on deposit for 24 hours at the ECB, beating the previous record of 384.3 billion euros seen in June 2010, showing that banks continue to be reluctant to lend to each other on the interbank market.