Apr 14, 2011

Asian shares weaken on growth concerns, China data eyed

A man looks at the closing price of Japan's Nikkei share average (top C) displayed along with major indices outside a brokerage in Tokyo April 12, 2011. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao
HONG KONG | Thu Apr 14, 2011 9:08pm EDT
(Reuters) - Shares in Asia's developed stock markets dipped and the dollar struggled at 16-month lows on Friday as disappointing U.S. data and a likely pickup in Chinese inflation gave market players an excuse to take profits after a recent sharp rally.
Asian stock markets are set to snap three consecutive weeks of gains as spiraling commodity prices stoked worries about a broader pickup in inflation within the region even as traders waited for Chinese data later in the day.
Unofficial reports say inflation will be a shade higher than originally forecast at 5.3-5.4 percent, triggering concerns that more aggressive policy action may be needed to prevent the economy overheating.
Stock markets in Australia .AXJO and South Korea .KS11 slipped, with shares in Seoul weakening after hitting a fresh closing high the previous session.
"The market overshot and profit-taking moves are expected," said Yoo Kyung-ha, a market analyst at Dongbu Securities.
Stocks in Japan .N225 were largely flat with trade turning volatile and thin in recent sessions before the earnings season as many firms are poised not to give forecasts for the business year in the wake of the triple disaster that struck in March.
Outside Japan, stocks .MIAPJ0000PUS treaded water after hitting a three-year high on Monday.
As inflationary pressures showed signs of rearing their ugly heads, a spike in U.S. jobless claims data also raised concerns that the U.S. economy's growth prospects may be dimming.
Stocks have sagged lately even as a Reuters poll of economists showed 2011 gross domestic product forecasts fell to 2.9 percent from 3.1 percent.
In currency markets, the dollar wallowed at a 16-month trough versus a basket of currencies .DXY as the market realized that there is scant chance of the Fed tightening for some time to come given the focus on unemployment rather than on inflation.
Commodities continued their record-breaking rally with spot gold rising to a record high of $1,477.96 an ounce while silver hit a 31-year high of $42.41 an ounce.

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