Asian shares are set to end the week on a sour note, as uncertainty across the geopolitical landscape and in major economies added to headwinds for investors even as the global rate easing cycle gets under way.
It has been a turbulent week in markets, with a tech sell-off sparked by deepening Sino-US trade tensions, uncertainty over US President Joe Biden's fate in the presidential race, disappointing Chinese economic data and a lacklustre third plenum outcome casting a shadow over the global mood.
In the foreign exchange market, Tokyo's recent bouts of intervention also kept traders on edge.
"We could just be getting a taste of things to come. And that is more turbulence," said Matt Simpson, senior market analyst at City Index.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slid 0.1 per cent and was headed for its worst week in over a month with a 2.4 per cent loss.
Japan's Nikkei fell to a more than two-week low and was last down 0.1 per cent, extending its sharp 2.4 per cent fall from the previous session.
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The Nikkei looked set to end the week 2.7 per cent lower, also its steepest weekly decline in three months.
Technology stocks continued to struggle, with South Korea's tech-heavy KOSPI index and Taiwan stocks both easing more than 1 per cent.
South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix was last 0.7 per cent lower, though Japan's Tokyo Electron, a chipmaking equipment manufacturer, rebounded some 2.6 per cent, after an 8.75 per cent tumble on Thursday.
Shares of Taiwan's TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker, fell 1.3 per cent, even after the company posted better-than-expected earnings on Thursday and raised its full-year revenue forecast.
In China, investors were left disappointed over the lack of details provided on the implementation steps for achieving the country's economic policy goals at the conclusion of its closely watched plenum on Thursday.
Chinese blue-chips fell 0.08 per cent in early trade, while the Shanghai Composite Index edged 0.07 per cent lower.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index slid 1.5 per cent.
"While more robust details are likely still forthcoming, we interpret the initial communique as the third plenum failing to deliver anything especially meaningful that would suggest changes to the longer-term direction for the Chinese economy," said Brendan McKenna, international economist at Wells Fargo.
The onshore yuan opened a touch weaker at 7.2626 per dollar.
Rates focus
The euro was last 0.02 per cent lower at $1.0893, having fallen 0.4 per cent in the previous session after the European Central Bank (ECB) kept rates on hold as expected but left the door open to a September cut as it downgraded its view of the euro zone's economic prospects.
"The policy statement gives little away, offering no meaningful changes from June - continuing to stress a data-dependent approach to policy setting," said Nick Rees, FX market analyst at MonFX.
"We still think that a September cut remains the base case." The dollar was meanwhile on the front foot, distancing itself from a four-month low hit earlier in the week against a basket of currencies.
Sterling dipped 0.03 per cent to $1.2942, while the Australian dollar fell 0.12 per cent to $0.6698.
The dollar was underpinned by strong US manufacturing data and jobless figures that did little to suggest a significant slowing in the labour market, though traders are still pricing in a September rate cut from the Federal Reserve.
The yen was a touch firmer at 157.31, helped by suspected bouts of intervention from Japanese authorities to prop up the currency and as an acceleration in the country's core inflation last month kept alive expectations that the Bank of Japan could soon raise interest rates.
In commodities, oil prices fell, as mixed economic signals weighed on investor sentiment.
Brent crude futures eased 0.58 per cent to $84.62 a barrel, while US crude futures slid 0.81 per cent to $82.15 per barrel.
Gold fell 0.8 per cent to $2,425.19 an ounce, retreating from a record high hit earlier this week on the prospect of lower global interest rates.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)