SYDNEY, Aug 5 — Asian shares extended their losses today as a sharp escalation in the Sino-US trade war kept financial markets on edge, while the Japanese yen and bonds held near recent peaks as nervous investors stuck with perceived safe havens.

US President Donald Trump abruptly decided on Thursday to slap 10% tariffs US$300 billion (RM1.25 trillion) in Chinese imports, stunning markets and ending a month-long trade truce. China vowed on Friday to fight back.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell for a seventh straight day to a two-month trough of 502.83, down 0.25%, marking the longest stretch of losses since October 2018.

Japan’s Nikkei slipped 1.1% to the lowest since early June, while Australian shares were also down for their fourth straight session in the red. South Korea’s Kospi tumbled 1.2% to hit the lowest since December 2016.

Advertisement

Oil prices were also pulled down again on demand worries.

The grim mood followed declines on Wall Street on Friday with MSCI’s gauge of world stocks posting its largest weekly loss of the year.

“Aftershocks from President Trump’s Thursday (tariff) announcement... are set to dominate the global economic and financial landscape in coming weeks and months,” said Ray Attrill, head of forex strategy at National Australia Bank.

Advertisement

The trade war between the world’s two largest economies has already disrupted global supply chains and slowed economic growth.

The abrupt escalation capped a critical week for global markets after the US Federal Reserve delivered a widely anticipated interest rate cut and played down expectations of further easing.

However, investors were not buying Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s claim that the 25-basis-point rate reduction was a mere “mid-cycle adjustment to policy”.

Futures are now pricing in deeper cuts than before last week’s Fed meeting. The terminal US rate <0US$FF:> is now seen at 1.22%, 93 basis points below the current effective rate.

Expectations of further monetary policy easing sent the dollar skidding. It held near a seven-month trough against the Japanese yen at 106.57 while the dollar index against a basket of six major rivals steadied at 98.08 after two straight days of losses.

The yen and the Swiss franc were boosted by safe-haven demand from the escalating trade tensions. Trump is also eyeing tariffs on the European Union though he hasn’t said anything officially yet.

The euro held firm after two days of gains against the dollar at US$1.1113.

Sterling hovered near 2017 lows at US$1.2155, pressured by concerns of Britain exiting the European Union without a deal in place. The pound has been whiplashed since late last month when Boris Johnson, a figurehead for the “leave” campaign in the 2016 Brexit referendum, became the country’s prime minister.

The Australian dollar, a liquid proxy for emerging market assets, hovered near a seven-month trough at US$0.6792 after losing 1.6% last week. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will hold its monthly policy meeting tomorrow where it is widely expected to hold rates at all-time lows of 1%.

Safe-haven assets have been in vogue with German 10-year government bond yields on Friday dropping to an all-time low of -0.502% and the country’s entire government bond yield curve turning negative for the first time ever.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury notes held near all-time highs to yield 1.8550% today. Last week, yields touched their lowest since Trump’s election in November 2016.

Spot gold was slightly firmer at US$1,442.11, within striking distance of a recent six high of US$1,452.60.

Oil extended losses with U.S crude off 31 cents at 55.35 and Brent down 58 cents at US$61.31. — Reuters