An investor walking past monitors showing stock market movements at a brokerage house in Shanghai. Shares closed down 4.27% at 3,507.74 points yesterday.

AFP/Tokyo

Asian shares slumped yesterday, plunging deeper into the red after weak manufacturing data from China fuelled panic among investors over the clouding outlook for the world economy.
The dollar notched more losses against the euro and yen after minutes from the US Federal Reserve dampened hopes for a rate rise next month, while Asia-Pacific currencies were hit by concerns about regional growth.
Shanghai shares closed down 4.27%, or 156.55 points, at 3,507.74, ending their worst week since 2011 as worries over the flagging economy and the possibility of weaker government support weighed.
China’s benchmark index closed at almost exactly the same level as the bottom of a recent market rout on July 8, before Beijing stepped in with a vast rescue package for equities.
Hong Kong fell 1.53%, or 347.85 points, to finish the day at 22,409.62 - its lowest point since May 2014 - taking it into a bear market after a more than 20% slump from its April peak.
Tokyo shares fell 2.98%, or 597.69 points, to finish at 19,435.83, a more than three-month low and down 5.28% on the week.
Seoul fell 2.01%, or 38.48 points, to 1,876.07 as tensions climbed with North Korea, and Sydney dropped 1.40%, or 73.98 points, to close at 5,214.60.
“It seems like we’re seeing the makings of the 1997 Asian financial crisis all over, with emerging-market currencies plunging,” Nicholas Teo, a strategist at CMC Markets in Singapore, told Bloomberg News.
“China’s knock-on effect on the rest of the world is huge and China’s deepening economic slowdown will have an impact for the next couple of months or so.”
Asia got a negative lead from Wall Street after US shares sank more than 2.0% Thursday, with the Dow dropping to its lowest level for 2015.
In other markets, Malaysia’s key stock index ended Friday 0.17% lower, or 2.74 points, at 1,574.67; Petronas Gas slipped 0.1% to 20.88 ringgit, while Telekom Malaysia rose 0.64% to 6.27 ringgit. State electric power utility Tenaga gained 1.92% to 10.60 ringgit.
Singapore closed 1.29%, or 38.77 points, lower at 2,971.01; casino operator Genting Singapore tumbled 1.24% to close at Sg$0.80 and telecom giant Singtel fell 0.77% to Sg$3.94.
Jakarta ended down 2.39%, or 105.96 points, at 4,335.95; investment company Polaris Investama gained 2.73% to 1,505 rupiah, while construction company Pembangunan Perumahan fell 7.75% to 3.450 rupiah.
Bangkok fell 0.50%, or 6.92 points, to 1,365.61; Airports of Thailand dropped 1.12% to 265baht while Bumrungrad Hospital climbed 2.22% to 230baht.
Wellington rose 0.13%, or 7.71 points, to 5,751.19; telecoms giant Spark New Zealand gained 9.42% to NZ$3.02 after they increased shareholder dividends. Fletcher Building was down 1.57% at $7.53
Taipei fell 3.02%, or 242.89 points, to 7,786.92; Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co shed 3.97% to Tw$121.0 while Fubon Financial Holding lost 3.02% to Tw$49.85. Financial markets in Manila are closed for a public holiday.
Gold gained as investors looked for safer bets, rising to $1,154.45 in Asia compared to $1,138.80 late Thursday.
Market sentiment has nosedived since China’s central bank devalued its currency last week in a surprise move widely seen as aimed at boosting the country’s flagging exports.
Stoking concerns, the preliminary reading of Caixin’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) came in at 47.1 this month, its worst reading since March 2009 and significantly below analysts’ forecasts.
“Global markets are in panic mode as the full scale of China’s slowdown becomes clearer and the market pricing for a Fed September rate hike is unwound,” said Angus Nicholson at IG Markets.
“China’s currency devaluation, further stock market declines, and now another weak PMI appear to have put it front-and-centre in investors’ minds.”
Commodity shares continued their slide as concerns about a slowdown in China, the world’s top importer of industrial metals and energy, continued to weigh.
A slump in raw materials prices has wiped off some $2tn from commodity stocks since the middle of last year.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for October delivery, a new contract, lost 27 cents to $40.78 a barrel in afternoon trade, while Brent crude for October tumbled 32 cents to $46.30 a barrel. The WTI September contract closed 32 cents higher at $41.14 in New York on Thursday, marginally higher than recent six-and-a-half year lows.
Analysts said oil held above the key $40 a barrel level thanks to a weaker greenback, which makes it cheaper for international investors to buy dollar-denominated oil.

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