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Zusammenfassung:A weak Wall Street finish made life tough for Asian stock bulls, but feeble local data and earnings figures added to the gloom
Asian Stocks Talking Points:
Regional mainboards were mostly weaker
Wall Streets slide set the tone but there was some local disappointment too
Focus now is on official US growth figures
Find out what retail foreign exchange investors make of your favorite currencys chances right now at the DailyFX Sentiment Page
Asia Pacific stocks were always likely to face a tricky Friday after Wall Streets swoon in the previous session on disappointing earnings and so it proved.
Most regional mainboards were lower as their weeks close loomed with the Nikkei 225 weighed down by falls for Softbank and, perhaps more pressingly Nintendo which came out with guidance described as extremely conservative. The Tokyo benchmark slipped 0.7% with the Shanghai Composite down by 0.8%. The ASX 200 fell 0.1% with the Hang Seng the only notable gainer and even that only up by 0.1%.
Friday‘s economic data was generally weak, with Japan’s industrial production fell 4.6% in March, the biggest fall since 2015. Clouded global trading conditions continue to bite into the worlds third-largest economy.
The US Dollar was steady close to two-year peaks against a basket of its major traded rivals. Thursdays data showed strong gains for US-made capital goods, on the heels of stronger retail sales and export numbers.
That said USD/JPY seems to be heading for a break below the narrow trading range which derived from the previous significant peaks- those of early March.
If that range base does give way then likely immediate support may come in at April 11s low of 110.90.
First quarter Gross Domestic Product numbers out of the US will come later Friday. They are expected to show that the worlds largest economy continues to outperform most developed rivals with a 2.2% annualized gain expected.
Gold prices edged back up as general risk appetite fell away and growth worries began to take control again. Crude oil prices fell back too, reportedly on suspicions that traditional producers including OPEC will increase production.
Still to come Friday is of course that US growth data but it‘s not quite alone on the schedule even though it’s clearly the top act. UK home-loans data and the University of Michigans consumer sentiment index will play supporting roles.
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