Asian Stocks dip as Trade Tensions Weigh on US Tech Sector
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Monday, June 25, 2018
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Asian markets were mostly
lower on Tuesday, as moves by the U.S to gain an upper hand on trade with China
weighed on the technology sector. Tech stocks have been the pillar of the Wall
Street's long-running bull market.
KEEPING
SCORE: Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 index dropped 0.5 percent to 22,221.33 and
South Korea's Kospi lost 0.9 percent to 2,337.60. Hong Kong's Hang Seng shed
1.2 percent to 28,619.21 and the Shanghai Composite in mainland China slipped
0.6 percent to 2,842.22. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 dipped 0.4 percent to
6,186.40. Taiwan's benchmark fell and Southeast Asian indexes were mostly
lower.
WALL
STREET: Major U.S. benchmarks finished broadly lower. The S&P 500 index
dropped 1.4 percent to 2,717.07, its worst loss since April 6. The Dow Jones
industrial average fell for the ninth time in 10 days, losing 1.3 percent to
24,252.80. The Nasdaq composite shed 2.1 percent to 7,532.01. The Russell 2000
index of smaller-company stocks slid 1.7 percent to 1,657.51.
TECH
DOWNTURN: Stocks tumbled on reports that the Trump administration plans to
limit exports of some high-tech products to China, and also limit investment in
technology firms by companies with substantial Chinese ownership. Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin's suggestion that the investment restrictions wouldn't
be limited to China caused stocks to slide further. The market recovered when
Peter Navarro, one of President Donald Trump's top trade advisors, told CNBC
that there was no plan for investment restrictions and that the
administration's probe into alleged technology theft is limited to China. All
but one of the 72 technology companies listed on the S&P 500 index closed
lower on Monday.
TRADE TENSIONS: U.S.
efforts to secure a pole position in trade are seeing some hit back. Iconic
American motorcycle maker Harley-Davidson said it would move some production
overseas to avoid tariffs the European Union is placing on motorcycles made in
the U.S. Those tariffs were a response to taxes the U.S. placed on steel and
aluminum from Europe. In less than two weeks, a 25 percent tariff will be
imposed by the U.S. on billions of dollars of Chinese products. China will also
raise import duties on $34 billion worth of American goods. China and the
European Union agreed on Monday to launch a group that will, among other
things, preserve support for international trade amid U.S. threats of import
controls.
ANALYST'S
TAKE: "Fears that China may pull investments in U.S. tech firms have
caused a broad drawback. There is a sense that trade tensions could be long
drawn and somewhat more antagonistic going forward," said Vishnu Varathan,
head of economics and macro strategy at Mizuho Bank.
ENERGY:
OPEC countries have agreed to raise the supply of crude oil by 1 million
barrels a day. But investors aren't sure if the cartel will carry it out.
Benchmark U.S. crude gained 7 cents to $68.15 per barrel in New York. It dipped
0.7 percent to settle at $68.08 per barrel on Monday. Brent crude, used to
price international oils, rose 5 cents to $74.60 per barrel in London.
CURRENCIES:
The dollar remained at 109.45 yen from late trading Monday. The euro
strengthened to $1.1718 from $1.1704.

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