Asian markets slide for 4th day as correction starts to take hold; European stocks falter
Asian stocks suffered their fourth straight day of losses Thursday amid a growing belief the markets were due for a reality check after the recent surge. European markets weakened in early trade.
Benchmarks in Tokyo, Hong Kong and elsewhere sputtered over 1 percent apiece in broad-based selling. Oil prices fluctuated around $71 a barrel while the dollar lost more ground against the yen.
Investors have become skeptical recently about the staying power of a massive spring rally amid signs that global industrial production and demand, while stabilizing, may still be far from lifting the economy out of its worst recession in decades.
Overnight weakness on Wall Street, as well as the urge to take some profits after months of gains as the second quarter closes out, only encouraged traders to sell more.
"It's time for the market to have a pause and for people to take stock of reality," said Song Seng Wun, economist at CIMB-GK in Singapore. "Nothing can go in a straight line unless the economy improves in the same straight line, and that's not happening."
Early in European trade, benchmarks in Britain, Germany and France were down by about 0.3 percent each.
Stock futures suggested slight gains Thursday on Wall Street. Dow futures rose 2 points to 8,495 and S&P futures gained 0.5, or 0.1 percent, to 905.80.
Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 stock average fell 137.13 points, or 1.4 percent, to 9,703.72, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 307.94, or 1.7 percent, to 17,776.66.
South Korea's Kospi lost 1.1 percent, Australia's key index was down 0.3 percent and Taiwan's benchmark pulled back 0.8 percent.
But Shanghai shares defied the losses, with the benchmark climbing 1.6 percent to a 10-month high, as the World Bank raised its China 2009 economic growth forecast from 6.5 percent to 7.2 percent and the country's premier said the economy was showing "positive changes."
The World Bank said Beijing's stimulus-driven investment boom would help shield the world's third-largest economy from the downturn, but cautioned it was too soon to say a sustained recovery was on the way.
China's ability to prosper as overseas economies slump has been a popular theme among investors, helping drive mainland and Hong Kong shares -- as well as certain commodities -- to huge gains in recent months.
But there are tentative signs that optimism about Chinese growth may be peaking, and that the recent outperformance by emerging market shares may be winding down, according to a Merrill Lynch survey of investment fund managers released Thursday.
Still, the survey reflected a recent shift in confidence, suggesting investment fund managers as a group are more bullish on stocks than at anytime since the crisis began to unfold in December 2007.
In the U.S. Wednesday, Wall Street endured another lackluster session. A cautious forecast from FedEx Corp. and a ratings downgrade of 18 banks were cause for more handwringing among investors.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 7.49, or 0.1 percent, to 8,497.18 after moving in and out of positive territory during the day. The broader S&P 500 index fell 1.26, or 0.1 percent, to 910.71.
Oil prices lingered near $71 a barrel Thursday in Asia, with benchmark crude for July delivery up 34 cents to $71.37 a barrel. The contract rose 56 cents overnight.
The dollar was lower at 95.65 yen from 95.87 yen. The euro declined to $1.3912 from $1.3970.