Asia stocks slide amid China woes, Japan catches up on chip sell-off

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Asian shares sank on Tuesday, as worries about the Chinese property sector weighed on markets from Hong Kong to Australia, while Japanese investors sold chip stocks on their return from a holiday-extended weekend.

Benchmark U.S. Treasury yields hovered near 16-year peaks and the dollar held close to six-month highs as traders braced for a Federal Reserve rate decision on Wednesday, in a week that also sees policy decisions from the Bank of Japan and Bank of England, among others.

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Crude oil continued its rally amid tighter supply, stoking worries about stagflation.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares (.MIAP00000PUS) slipped 0.3%.

Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) tumbled 1.1% under the weight of big losses for chip-related stocks including Tokyo Electron (8035.T) and Advantest (6857.T).

Japanese markets were closed Monday, when Asian tech stocks sold off following a Reuters report that TSMC (2330.TW) had asked its major vendors to delay deliveries.

John Pearce, CIO at Unisuper, called the news “surprising.”
“The one thing you were almost certain of was that demand for semiconductors was only one way,” he said.

At the same time, “there’s enough lead indicators there to say there’s real softness in the pipeline,” he added.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (.HSI) declined 0.3%, with a subindex of tech stocks (.HSTECH) sliding 0.7%.

Chinese property stocks were volatile, with a subindex of Hang Seng developers (.HSMPI) dropping as much as 1.2% at one point, although it was last off 0.2%.

Source: Reuters

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