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Stocks, euro slide as crisis drags on

Hong Kong - Asian stocks fell and the euro dropped 1% on Monday as investors fretted about European policymakers' fumbling attempts to solve their crippling sovereign debt crisis.

A weekend of disappointing news from the eurozone prompted market players to cut risk and move into gold and US Treasuries, even as speculation grew that the Federal Reserve would announce further policy easing moves to stimulate the sputtering US economy at a meeting this week.

EU finance ministers meeting in Poland broke no new ground in dealing with the debt crisis in talks over the weekend.

The cancellation of a visit to the United States by Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou to chair an emergency cabinet meeting at home, and a regional election defeat for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, added to a sense of worsening crisis.

"I guess it's just the lack of progress in Europe and the realisation that Greece is probably going to default at some point," said Colin Whitehead, analyst at stock research house Fat Prophets in Sydney.

"Until the market has confidence that policy is in place to actually handle that default, I guess we are still looking at pretty weak sentiment."

Weak tone

S&P 500 stock index futures set the weak tone for Asia, falling 1.6%. MSCI's index of Asia Pacific shares outside of Japan fell 2%, edging back towards its July 2010 low hit last Monday.

Japan's markets were closed for a holiday.

Australia's index fell 1.7%, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index lost 2.3%.

Greece on Sunday pledged to take tough decisions needed to secure a fresh round of international aid and avoid default, but announced no new austerity measures.

EU and IMF inspectors will hold a conference call with Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos later on Monday to hear how Greece plans to plug this year's budget shortfall.

At stake is an €8bn loan tranche from a €110bn bailout secured last year, which Athens needs by October to avoid running out of cash.

A Reuters poll of more than 50 economists last week gave a 65% chance of a Greek default, but only a one-in-five chance it will leave the euro.

Global equities have been pummelled since late July on the twin concerns of renewed recession in the United States and Europe's sovereign debt woes, which many fear could morph into a full-blown banking crisis.

MSCI's Asia-Pacific ex-Japan index is down 20% from its 2011 high reached in April.

Speculation is mounting that the Fed will take steps to lengthen the maturity of its debt holdings at a two-day meeting ending on Wednesday, forcing down longer-term US interest rates.

Before that, President Barack Obama will release plans later on Monday calling for more than $3 trillion in deficit cuts over 10 years, with about half the savings coming from higher taxes on the wealthy and big corporations.

A battle with Republicans in Congress over how to cut the deficit and create jobs is likely to highlight the partisan deadlock in Washington that has rattled investors and prompted Standard & Poor's to cut America's credit rating in August.

Euro weak, dollar gains

In currency markets, the euro dived a cent against the dollar, with investors looking towards a G20 meeting on Thursday and Friday for any likelihood of coordinated action to restore market confidence. 

The euro traded around $1.3666, edging back towards a seven-month low hit last week, and to ¥105.05, as investors reacted to the unproductive European Union meeting.

In other circumstances, expectations of further Fed policy easing might weigh on the dollar, but the search for safety meant investors remained keen to hold the currency, which rose 0.7% against a basket of major peers.

"This week will be another good one for the USD with weakness in euro, pound and Aussie," said Joseph Capurso, currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

The pullback in risk appetite also increased demand for safe haven gold, with the precious metal extending its chunky gains from Friday by 0.9% to $1 827 an ounce. It hit a record at around $1 920 earlier this month.

Oil fell around $1 due to worries that economic woes could hit demand and on the stronger dollar, which makes it more expensive for holders of other currencies.

Brent crude fell 0.8% to $111.35 a barrel and US crude slipped 1.2% to $86.90.

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