By John Phillips
Asian markets traded lower Thursday, tracking a negative lead
from Wall Street, with the Japanese market underperforming amid a
stronger yen.
Investors took a cue from Wednesday's losses in the U.S.
following lower-than-expected readings on the U.S.
non-manufacturing sector and private-sector jobs growth.
Focus was on the Bank of Japan's policy meeting outcome due
later Thursday. Expectations for fresh easing measures are high, as
it will be the first meeting under new Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda, who is
committed to realizing the bank's 2.0% inflation target.
All 10 economists surveyed by Dow Jones expect the Bank of Japan
to expand its asset purchases, with some betting it will increase
the amount by Yen15 trillion-Yen20 trillion ($160 billion-$215
billion) a year and start buying Japanese government bonds with
maturities longer than three years, the current limit.
Seven of those surveyed say the central bank will decide to make
its asset-buying program "open-ended" from this month or next,
instead of waiting for next January as scheduled. Two expect the
introduction of a new easing target in addition to its existing
inflation and asset-buying targets.
"In the absence of open-ended, multi-asset-class purchases to
bring consumer price inflation to 2.0% within two years, there is a
more than reasonable chance that the board may well disappoint,"
David Scutt, Treasury dealer at Arab Bank, wrote in a note to
clients.
Japan's Nikkei Stock Average underperformed its regional peers,
falling 1.8% amid a stronger yen. Major exporters were lower: Canon
(CAJ) dropped 3.7%, Nintendo (NTDOF) slid 2.1%, and Toyota Motor
(TM) fell 2.2%.
In Sydney, the S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.6%. Resources plays
weighed on the Australian market amid commodity price weakness
including a decline in copper to an eight-month low overnight. BHP
Billiton (BHP) fell 1.4%, Newcrest Mining (NCMGF) dropped 3.2% and
Rio Tinto (RIO) lost 1.0%.
In foreign exchange markets, the yen was stronger against the
U.S. dollar (USDJPY) and the euro (EURJPY), as investors priced-in
worries that the Bank of Japan's policy outcome could underwhelm
market participants.
"Our baseline view remains that risks on [the dollar's rate
against the yen] this month are skewed to the downside, given
sky-high expectations," Westpac's Sean Callow wrote in a note.
Investors were also focused on the European Central Bank's
policy decision due later Thursday, as well as Friday's U.S. jobs
data for trading cues.
South Korea's Kospi Composite fell 1.2%
Markets in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan were shut for
holidays.
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