Hong Kong - Asian shares edged lower on Thursday as mixed regional data and overnight declines on Wall Street prompted investors to take profits, while the dollar held steady as expectations for a rise in US interest rates were strengthened by buoyant home sales.
Financial spreadbetters expected Britain's FTSE 100 to open around 0.4% higher, Germany's DAX 0.3% higher, and France's CAC 40 to open around 0.4%.
South Korea's economy recorded its weakest expansion in six years in the second quarter, battered by a deadly virus outbreak and poor exports, while Japan reported strengthening export growth in June but concern remained over how shipments to China might be affected by its slowing economy.
The MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slipped 0.2% but was holding well above a near one-and-a-half year low hit on July 8.
Tokyo's Nikkei rose 0.4%, helped by a weaker yen, while Australian shares were off 0.2%.
Capital flow trends suggest money managers are slowly turning more bullish towards the region's growth prospects within the broader emerging market bloc.
Equity and bond inflows turned positive for the week of July 15 in Asia while Latin America posted yet another week of redemptions from both these asset classes, according to EPFR data compiled by BNP Paribas.
"Asia remains one of the bright spots in the global economy with China and India remaining committed to a broader economic reforms agenda," said Kenneth Akintewe, a portfolio manager at Aberdeen Asset Management, which has $490.8bn in assets under management globally.
China stocks extended their recovery on Thursday from last month's collapse, with the Shanghai Composite index set to rise for a sixth consecutive session, led by gains in blue chips. The Hong Kong market also advanced.
Stock markets were subdued by disappointing earnings from global tech giants, led by Apple whose shares plunged overnight, a day after the iPhone maker gave a fourth quarter revenue forecast that was below market expectations.
Microsoft also slumped after reporting its biggest quarterly loss.
In currencies, the dollar nudged up 0.1% to ¥124.05 after rebounding overnight from a low of ¥123.27 thanks to a rise in US home sales to a eight-and-a-half year peak.
The euro was little changed at $1.09360 after coming off an overnight peak of $1.0966.
Weaker commodity prices also supported a mild rebound in the dollar. Brent crude prices extended their decline after losing 1.6% on Wednesday after data showed U.S. crude inventories rose last week, while spot gold slid to a five-year low on the dollar's bounce.
"Sentiment towards commodities as a whole has been plummeting as the Fed lift-off timeline narrows and the drive to the dollar returns after six weeks of macro turmoil," Evan Lucas, market strategist at IG in Melbourne, wrote.
The drop in commodity prices has hurt commodity currencies such as the Canadian dollar, which held near a six-year low of C$1.3053 against the US dollar overnight.
The Canadian dollar and other commodity currencies could weaken even more if the US Federal Reserve begins hiking interest rates as early as September.
The New Zealand dollar, which also probed multi-year lows recently against the US currency, fared a little better after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand delivered a smaller interest rate cut than some in the market had expected and softened its rhetoric on the kiwi following its recent, dramatic fall.
The kiwi firmed as high as $0.6654, recovering from a six-year trough of $0.6498 hit last week.
Rand - Dollar
19.09
-1.0%
Rand - Pound
24.05
-0.7%
Rand - Euro
20.58
-0.5%
Rand - Aus dollar
12.39
-0.3%
Rand - Yen
0.13
-0.9%
Platinum
894.64
-0.3%
Palladium
992.99
-0.9%
Gold
2,197.50
+0.1%
Silver
24.44
-0.8%
Brent Crude
86.09
-0.2%
Top 40
67,880
+0.3%
All Share
74,091
+0.3%
Resource 10
56,315
+1.2%
Industrial 25
103,611
+0.3%
Financial 15
16,459
-0.4%
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