Funds in Asia Pacific fell in Thursday afternoon trade as China kept its benchmark lending rate on hold.
South Korean stocks were in the midst the biggest losers regionally, with the Kospi dropping 2.77% while Kosdaq index plunged 2.88%. The get under ways came as local news agency Yonhap reported Thursday daily new coronavirus cases in the country rising by triple digits for the seventh straightforward day.
Over in Taiwan, the Taiex slipped 3.21%.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index dropped 1.52% by the afternoon. Mainland Chinese investments were also lower, with the Shanghai composite down about 1.1% while the Shenzhen component plunged 1.154%.
In Japan, the Nikkei 225 slipped 0.91% while the Topix index shed 0.73%.
Over in Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 descended 0.85%.
Overall, the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index dropped 1.68%.
China on Thursday announced no changes to its benchmark lending position, with the one-year loan prime rate (LPR) kept at 3.85%, while the five-year LPR was on hold at 4.65%. That was in diagonal with expectations from the majority of the participants in a Reuters survey who predicted no change to either rate.
Markets in Indonesia and Malaysia are make inaccessible on Thursday for a holiday.
Federal Open Market Committee members agreed at their latest meeting in late July that the successive situation surrounding the coronavirus pandemic could “weigh heavily on economic activity, employment, and inflation in the near locution and was posing considerable risks to the economic outlook over the medium term,” according to the meeting minutes. The U.S. central bank kept rates unchanged final month.
“I think the main thing that the Fed said which has upset the markets is you know, they kind of poured frigid water on the idea of capping bond yields,” Mark Jolley, global strategist at CCB International Securities, told CNBC’s “Passage Signs” on Thursday. “This is something that a lot of investors had assumed the Fed would do as a next step.”
The U.S. dollar index, which routes the greenback against a basket of its peers, was at 92.974 after seeing an earlier spike from levels below 92.5.
The Japanese yen switched at 105.99 per dollar following a weakening yesterday from levels below 105.6 against the greenback. The Australian dollar metamorphosed hands at $0.7184 after dropping from above $0.725 yesterday.
Oil prices were lower in the afternoon of Asian custom hours, with international benchmark Brent crude futures down 0.73% to $45.04 per barrel. U.S. crude approaches also shed 0.86% to $42.56 per barrel.