Asian stocks slipped on Thursday as weak oil prices continued to feed global growth worries, while the euro held solid gains after a policymaker poured cold water on market expectations of more easing by the European Central Bank.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan lost 0.3%.
Japan's Nikkei fell 1.3% to hit a five-week low and Australian shares dropped 1.5%.
Chinese and Indonesian shares were the only gainers, with the CSI300 rising 0.7% and the Jakarta Composite advancing 0.2%
Risk asset markets continued to take cues from crude oil. Brent crude edged up slightly to fetch $40.44 a barrel in Asia, but remains within reach of a 7-year low of $39.57 struck on Wednesday.
"The process of taking money off the table is likely to be driven by nervousness ahead of the US Federal Reserve's moves next week, along with the soft oil price being viewed as a barometer of future economic activity," said Angus Gluskie, managing director of White Funds Management in Sydney.
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In currencies, the euro slipped 0.1% to fetch $1.1010 after climbing a to one-month peak of $1.1044 overnight.
The common currency, already on a bullish footing after the ECB's monetary easing last week fell well short of expectations, received a further boost after Governing Council member Ewald Nowotny suggested on Wednesday the markets were expecting too much stimulus from the central bank.
A notable mover in Asia was the Australian dollar, which soared after a report showed Australian jobs surged by 71,400 in November, pushing the unemployment rate to a 19-month low of 5.8%. That followed strong gains in October, making this the strongest two-month total in 28 years.
"Two very very strong back-to-back months and it's very difficult to pin any drivers down because economic growth is still pretty soft," said Tom Kennedy, an economist at JPMorgan.
Despite questions about the reliability of the data, the Aussie jumped 0.9% to $0.7300.
The New Zealand dollar also advanced after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) cut interest rates early on Thursday but said further easing should not be needed.
The kiwi traded at $0.6730 after gaining more than one% in response to the central bank's statement.
"Price action following the RBNZ announcement suggests that the bigger surprise was the watering down of the forward guidance and focus on upside risks as opposed to the rate cut," wrote Todd Elmer, Citi's Asian head of G10 FX strategy.
The Chinese yuan headed in the opposite direction with the central bank setting the midpoint at a more than four-year low for a second day, a sign that Beijing is quietly permitting the currency to depreciate after it was included in the IMF's reserve basket.
The People's Bank of China set the midpoint rate at 6.4236 per dollar prior to market open, 0.1% weaker than the previous fix of 6.4140. The spot market opened at 6.4300 per dollar, its weakest since August 12, and was changing hands at 6.4385, compared with the previous close of 6.4280.
The dollar fetched 121.63 yen after tumbling overnight to a 1-month low of 121.07 yen as the Japanese currency attracted safe haven bids amid the ongoing rout in commodities.
With the greenback on the back foot against the euro and yen, the dollar index hovered near a 1-month low of 97.223 struck overnight.
The US currency was hurt as Treasury yields fell on a flight to safety to government debt, prompted by falling oil prices and a decline on Wall Street.
The S&P 500 tracked weaker commodities and lost 0.8% on Wednesday, while the Dow lost 0.4% and the Nasdaq shed 1.5%.
Highlighting the plight of the broader commodity markets, the Thomson Reuters Core Commodity CRB index hit a fresh 13-year low on Wednesday.