TOKYO: Japanese stocks skidded on Monday, helping the yen rebound from a fresh seven-year low against the dollar touched after news Japan unexpectedly fell into recession in the third quarter.
Meanwhile, Shanghai and Hong Kong opened around 1 per cent higher but quickly erased gains on suspected profit-taking by traders who had positioned for the launch of the Stock Connect scheme that will let Hong Kong and Shanghai investors buy and sell shares on each other’s bourses.
“The market had already responded to the stock link,” Andy Wong, senior investment analyst at Harris Fraser (International) Ltd in Hong Kong said, referring to the Hong Kong market. “Short-term investors are taking profits from the market.”
Much of the cash flow is expected to be northbound at first, as foreign investors on the Hong Kong Exchange target mainland shares under a daily quota of 13 billion yuan.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.3 per cent, as the disappointing growth data sent the Nikkei stock average tumbling 2 per cent.
Japanese GDP contracted an annualised 1.6 per cent in the July-September quarter, compared with a 2.1 per cent increase forecast by economists in a Reuters poll. That followed a revised 7.3 per cent contraction in the second quarter, which was the biggest slump since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
The shockingly downbeat report reinforced expectations Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will delay a sales tax hike, set for October next year, after a hike in the tax in April took a heavy toll on consumption.
The dollar initially rallied as high as 117.06 yen, but gave up those gains in extremely volatile trade as the Nikkei extended losses. Many market participants, particularly foreign investors, sell the yen to hedge their equities positions, so the Japanese currency tends to gain whenever stocks drop. The dollar was down 0.3 per cent at 115.95.
“Dollar/yen has been moving recently in close relationship with (Japanese) equities so the Nikkei’s fall knocked the pair from its highs,” said Masafumi Yamamoto, a market strategist at Praevidential Strategy in Tokyo.
“The GDP data was so unexpectedly weak and clouded many prospects taken for a given,” he said.
The yen’s renewed strength helped push down the dollar index about 0.2 per cent to 87.401.
On Wall Street on Friday, US shares were slightly lower, but still logged weekly gains and were underpinned by data showing most US retailers reported strong sales in October and consumer sentiment rose to a seven-year high in November.
Two separate reports on Friday showed Americans’ expectations for long-term inflation fell, and import prices slipped 1.3 per cent in September as cheaper oil and a strong dollar slashed prices of imported items.
Leaders from the G20 group of nations agreed on Sunday to boost global growth, tackle climate change and crack down on tax avoidance, but ties between the West and Russia showed signs of fraying over the Ukraine crisis.
The euro added 0.2 per cent to $1.2544, holding well above a two-year low of $1.2358 touched on Nov. 7.
In commodities trading, US crude dropped about 0.5 per cent to $75.42 a barrel, moving back toward a four-year low of $73.25 marked on Friday. Brent crude shed 0.6 per cent to $78.94.
Spot gold slightly on the day to $1,186.92 an ounce, after its 2.5 per cent surge on Friday on short-covering and fund buying.