Tokyo, Japan (BBN) – Asian equities struggled on Wednesday, ahead of a rates decision from the US Federal Reserve and as Dutch voters head to the polls.
In Japan, the Nikkei 225 closed down 0.16 per cent or 32.1 points at 19,577.38, as the yen strengthened against the dollar, reports CNBC.
A stronger yen is generally seen as a negative for Japanese stocks.
Toshiba fell 12.3 per cent to 189.50 yen per stock, after the Tokyo Stock Exchange put its shares under supervision to see whether it meets the delisting criteria following the conglomerate postponing its official third-quarter earnings.
“Instead of explaining how they would avoid delisting, Toshiba held a presentation focused on longer-term ‘Measures to Rebuild Toshiba’ and 2019 profit targets,” said equity analysts at Jefferies in a Tuesday note.
Australia’s ASX 200 closed up 0.26 per cent or 14.9 points at 5,774.
South Korea’s Kospi closed almost flat at 2,133.
Earlier, local media outlets said the country would hold a presidential election on May 9 to replace impeached leader Park Geun-hye.
Prior to market open, official South Korean data showed the unemployment rate was at 5 per cent in February, its highest since January 2010.
The jobless rate was at 3.8 per cent in January.
On the Chinese mainland, the Shanghai composite finished up 0.08 per cent or 2.6 points at 3,241.94 and the Shenzhen composite closed flat at 2,026.76.
In a Wednesday news conference, Premier Li Keqiang stressed the need for China to have healthy relations with the US, and reiterated China’s stability in economics, financial markets and foreign policy.
President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are set to have scheduled talks next month.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was down 0.27 per cent by 3:15pm HK/SIN.
All eyes were on the Fed’s monetary policy decision, due Thursday morning Asian time.
“A US rate rise is now baked in the market cake… the focus will shift to board projections,” said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets, in a Wednesday note.
Market expectations for a 25-basis-point rate hike stood at 93 percent on the CMC Group FedWatch Tool at 7:15 am HK/SIN time.
McCarthy said that any indications of a further three hikes this year could disrupt equity markets.
Over on Wall Street, stocks closed mildly lower, as energy stocks plunged.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.21 per cent to close at 20,837.37, weighed down by Chevron.
The S&P 500 closed down 0.34 per cent at 2,365.45, with energy leading 10 sectors lower.
The Nasdaq composite ended down 0.32 per cent at 5,856.82.
European political headlines are another sideshow capturing the market’s attention.
Voters in the Netherlands will head to the polls later to elect the country’s next prime minister.
This is the first of several votes to take place across Europe and is seen as a bellwether for political sentiment in the region.
Meanwhile, a spat between the Netherlands and Turkey dragged on.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan warned the Netherlands that his country could take further steps in the diplomatic row, while a government spokesman in Ankara said economic sanctions could be on the table.
In France, presidential candidate Francois Fillon was put under formal investigation on suspicion of embezzling state funds.
Jussi Halla-aho, member of the European parliament and front-runner in the race to lead Finland’s second largest political party said he would seek an exit from the euro zone and the European Union, Reuters reported.
The dollar remained relatively strong against the basket of currencies, trading at 101.55 at 3:15pm HK/SIN, above levels around 101.4 seen yesterday.
The yen traded stronger at 114.67 against the greenback versus yesterday’s highs above 115, while the Australian dollar was at $0.7579.
During Asian hours, oil prices recouped some of their losses. US crude was up 1.49 per cent at $48.43 a barrel while Brent crude added 1.24 per cent to $51.55 by 3:15 pm HK/SIN.
Oil prices dropped to three-month lows on Tuesday during U.S. hours, after the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) reported a rise in global crude stocks and a surprise output jump from Saudi Arabia.
US crude had fallen to its lowest settlement price on Tuesday since November 29 — a day before OPEC’s supply cut deal.
BBN/SK/AD