Asian shares extended losses on Monday as weak Chinese imports increased concerns over a slowdown in the world’s second largest economy, while the dollar was steady after US jobs data raised chances for a US interest rate hike as early as September.

European stocks

European markets were seen opening mixed, as the spectre of Greece’s financial woes still loomed over sentiment.

Financial spreadbetters expected Britain’s FTSE 100 to open up by 8-15 points, or as much as 0.2 per cent higher. Germany’s DAX was seen falling by 11 to 27 points, or as much as 0.2 per cent lower, while France’s CAC was seen opening unchanged to down by 7 points, or as much as 0.1 per cent lower.

“European equities are set to start mixed this morning. Although the FTSE looks set to eke out some small gains on the open, continental markets look set to sag on fears that Greece is about to go over the edge,’’ Jonathan Sudaria, a dealer at Capital Spreads, said in a note.

Greece debt deal

“With [Greek Prime Minister] Alexis Tsipras drawing a line in the sand on the one hand, and Greece’s creditors adamant that deeper reforms are needed to unlock any cash on the other, a default looks startlingly possible,’’ he said.

On Sunday, the head of the European Union had rebuked Tsipras in unusually sharp terms, and warned that time was running out for Athens to reach a debt deal with its lenders to avert default.

Change in Deutsche Bank leadership

Also clouding the European mood, Deutsche Bank had purged its leadership on Sunday, appointing Briton John Cryan as chief executive to replace Anshu Jain just two weeks after Jain was given more power to reorganise the bank.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.4 per cent, while Japan’s Nikkei stock index recovered from early lows but still ended down slightly.

Fall in Chinese exports

China’s exports fell less than expected last month, but imports tumbled at a greater pace, stoking concerns over a the economy’s slowdown giving Beijing more reason to take further stimulus steps.

China’s exports in May fell 2.5 per cent from a year earlier in dollar-denominated terms, better than market expectations, while imports tumbled 17.6 per cent.

Considering expectations of a slight rebound in import levels in May due to recovering crude prices, “the continuing fall in imports suggest demand side factors — softening domestic consumption — are at play,’’ said Chester Liaw, economist at Forecast Pte Ltd in Singapore.

US stocks end mixed

On Wall Street on Friday, major indexes were mixed, and nearly flat for the week, while the US benchmark Treasury yield marked its best weekly performance in two years and touched an eight-month high after the jobs data.

US non-farm payrolls jumped 280,000 last month, the largest gain since December, while payrolls for March and April were revised to show 32,000 more jobs were created than previously reported, the Labor Department said.

Treasury yields

The 10-year Treasury yield stood at 2.398 per cent in Asian trade, compared to its US close of 2.400 on Friday.

The higher yields helped power the dollar to a 13-year peak of 125.86 yen on Friday. It was last down about 0.1 per cent on the day at 125.54 yen.

Dollar vs other currencies

An index measuring the dollar against a basket of six major rivals edged up about 0.1 per cent to 96.424.

The greenback gained on the euro, which remained pressured by Greece’s ongoing struggle to solve its debt crisis. The euro bought $1.1103, down about 0.1 per cent on the day.

Crude oil

The stronger dollar has been weighing on commodities prices, with oil logging weekly losses despite a rally on Friday.

The downbeat Chinese import figure was unsupportive for an oil market already concerned about oversupply after exporter group OPEC agreed to stick by its policy of unconstrained output for another six months on Friday.

Brent crude futures slipped about 0.5 per cent to $62.95 a barrel, after skidding 3.6 per cent last week. US crude fell 0.8 per cent to $58.68 after giving up 2 per cent last week.

comment COMMENT NOW