Asian stocks edge lower in lead up to central bank meetings, tracking Wall Street’s declines

Asian stocks declined on Monday, as markets took cues from declines in Wall Street’s last session, with focus shifting to the Bank of Japan and other central banks that are holding meetings this week.

The Nikkei 225 declined 0.57 percent, with falls in utilities, energy and pharmaceuticals weighing on the overall index in the morning. The broader Topix traded lower by 0.29 percent.

Elsewhere, the Kospi pared steeper losses from earlier to hover just below the flat line as investors digested earnings releases. The index traded lower by 0.04 percent amid losses in large cap technology names, with index bellwether Samsung Electronics down 0.75 percent and SK Hynix off by 0.12 percent.

Chinese stocks traded in different directions. The Shanghai Composite rose 0.4 percent as financials and metals gained while the smaller Shenzhen Composite pulled back by 0.46 percent.

Meanwhile, in Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index edged lower by 0.25 percent as near 1 percent declines in the information technology and consumer goods sectors weighed on the index.

Down Under, the S&P/ASX 200 eased 0.46 percent as most sectors traded in negative territory. Losses in the morning were led by the drop in the health care subindex, while heavily weighted “Big Four” banks all traded lower.

MSCI’s index of shares in Asia Pacific excluding Japan slipped 0.12 percent in morning trade.

The negativity in the Asian session followed declines in U.S. stocks seen on Friday as earnings news stateside overshadowed the release of solid second-quarter U.S. gross domestic product data, with tech leading the losses.

Intel shares fell in the previous session on the chipmaker announcing delays for next generation chips while Twitter sank after reporting a drop in monthly active users. That contributed to a second day of steep losses for the tech sector stateside after the plunge in Facebook’s stock on Thursday.

Meanwhile, U.S. second-quarter GDP grew at 4.1 percent, in line with expectations, with a jump in consumer spending and business investment contributing to the figure. That was the quickest pace of growth since 2014.

Central banks in spotlight

Against the yen, the dollar was stable for the most part at 111.04 at 9:51 a.m. HK/SIN ahead of the Bank of Japan’s statement on monetary policy due on Tuesday. The central bank begins its policy meeting on Monday.

“Our base case scenario is for the BOJ to make no policy change. But there is increasing speculation the BOJ may tweak its yield curve control settings in part because of lower bank profitability and muted inflation in Japan,” Elias Haddad, senior currency strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, wrote in a note.

Stateside, the Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee will embark on its two-day meeting on Tuesday, although not much is expected to result from that. Still, investors are keeping watch for clues as to whether the central bank will raise rates for the fourth time this year in December.

The U.S. currency was a touch firmer after softening on Friday, with the dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of peers, last trading at 94.697.

On the commodities front, Brent crude futures were mostly firm at $74.29 per barrel and U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude rose 0.35 percent to trade at $68.93.

In individual movers, Hotel Shilla was up 3.57 percent after rising more than 6 percent earlier in the session. The company reported a 303 percent increase in operating income after the market close on Friday.

Over in China, shares of Changsheng Biotechnology dropped 5 percent amid public outcry over a recent vaccine scandal. The pharmaceuticals company reportedly fabricated manufacturing and test records, Reuters reported, citing state media.

Meanwhile, other companies due to report earnings on Monday include Hang Lung Properties and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group.

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