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Asia Markets Are Hurting As Oil Continues Falling

In Asia on January 14, 2014, Tokyo fell 0.80 percent while on currency markets, a flight to safer investments saw the yen advance
In Asia on January 14, 2014, Tokyo fell 0.80 percent while on currency markets, a flight to safer investments saw the yen advance © AFP/File Yoshikazu Tsuno

Hong Kong (AFP) - Oil prices fell further on Wednesday, heading to six-year lows, while crude's weakness continues to test investor confidence, pushing the yen up and weighing on Asian equities.

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The euro also slipped further after comments from a key member of the European Central Bank fanned expectations that it will unveil a vast bond-buying scheme at its policy meeting next week.

On oil markets US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for February fell 18 cents $45.71, a level not seen since March 2009, and Brent slipped 25 cents to $46.34, its lowest since April 2009.

Both contracts were hammered Tuesday after two members of OPEC said the cartel could not prevent prices from plunging further, despite losing more than 50 percent since June.

Ministers from the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait also said prices could drop further unless there is a cut in booming shale oil output in the United States.

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Analysts say richer cartel members -- such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia -- have been ready to accept falls in the hope they will force higher-cost shale producers out of the market.

The weak prices have hit buying sentiment for global equities, with the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all sinking in New York.

In Asia on Wednesday, Tokyo fell 0.80 percent and Sydney gave up 0.26 percent, while Seoul was flat. However Shanghai added 0.27 percent on speculation the government will make more cash available to avert a cash crisis, while Hong Kong edged up 0.20 percent.

On currency markets a flight to safer investments saw the yen advance.

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The dollar was at 117.80 yen early Wednesday, down from 117.90 yen in New York and well off rates above 118 yen seen in Tokyo earlier Tuesday.

"If stocks continue to slump on the idea that low oil prices will become a risk to the US or the global economy, dollar-yen will continue to fall," said Masato Yanagiya, head of foreign exchange and money trading at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. in New York. "It'll be easy for the yen to strengthen amid a flight to quality," he told Bloomberg News.

The euro bought 138.60 yen and $1.1766 against 138.84 yen and $1.1777 in US trade.

The single currency took a hit Tuesday after Ewald Nowotny, a governor of the Austrian central bank and a member of the ECB governing council, highlighted the need for policy makers to tackle the threat of deflation.

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"It is important that one takes deflation risks seriously and addresses them," Nowotny said, according to Bloomberg News, adding that the bank was weighing several stimulus measures. "We shouldn't wait too long with a reaction."

Analysts said the remarks were a sign the ECB may act when it meets on January 22, in part because Nowotny is not known for being particularly interventionist.

Gold was $1,232.34 an ounce, compared with $1,238.84 on Tuesday.

Read the original article on AFP. Copyright 2015. Follow AFP on Twitter.
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