Asian shares fell yesterday, weighed down by a plunge in high-flying tech shares on fears that a long boom in micro-chips may have peaked, while virtual currency bitcoin steadied after a roller-coaster ride in the previous session.
The digital currency’s 10-fold increase in price this year has stoked worries of a bubble and potential crash that could rattle conventional financial markets.
Bitcoin rose nearly 3% to around $10,100 during Asian trading yesterday.
On Wednesday, it surged to a record high of $11,395, before it slipped to a low of $9,250.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dropped 1.3%, with technology bellwether Samsung Electronics falling 4.3% to two-month lows and Taiwan’s TSMC down 3.6%. Japan’s Nikkei reversed early losses to end 0.6% higher, though the country’s electronic machinery makers index was down 1.5%.
“It is true that if you look at the world’s semiconductor sales on chart, their year-on-year growth appears to be peaking out.
Given the current high sales level, some market players would be naturally worried,” said Hiroshi Watanabe, economist at Sony Financial Holdings.
“But if you look at what’s driving demand, it’s not just smart phones and actually a lot of things, such as data centres. The world’s demand is likely to continue expanding in 2018 and I don’t see the need to be pessimistic now,” he said.
Some market players said selling in tech shares had more to do with profit-taking ahead of the end of the year, and described the slide as a healthy correction.
“Tech shares have done so well over the past year. There are many shares that saw their prices doubling. So investors have been on guard.
They have been looking for an opportune time to sell,” said Norihiro Fujito, senior investment analyst at Morgan Stanley.
The Nasdaq index is still up 26.8% so far this year, more than 9 percentage points above gains in the S&P.
The ex-Japan Asia-Pacific MSCI index edged up 0.5% for the month, taking its gains for far this year to more than 30%. On the other hand, US bond yields rose across the maturities and the dollar gained some traction after the US third-quarter GDP growth was revised up to an annualised 3.3%, from the initial estimate of 3.0%. That was the fastest growth in three years, though economists noted that inventories, goods yet to be sold, accounted for nearly a quarter of GDP growth.
The US Senate on Wednesday took a step toward passage of tax legislation that is a top White House priority, setting up a likely decisive vote later this week.
But it remained unclear if the bill has enough Republican support to become law.
The 10-year US Treasuries yield rose to 2.389%, edging near this month’s high of 2.414%. There was no immediate market response after US President Donald Trump nominated Carnegie Mellon University professor Marvin Goodfriend, viewed as a policy hawk, to be a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
The euro traded at $1.1863, steady in early Asian trade but has been on retreat since it had hit a two-month high of $1.1961 on Monday.
The dollar also firmed to ¥112.00 from Monday’s ten-week low of ¥110.85.
The British pound hit a two-month high of $1.3480 after European Union diplomats said that Britain has moved “close” to EU demands over Brexit.
Among Asian currencies, the South Korean won stepped back from a 2-1/2-year high set the previous day after the country’s central bank raised interest rates for the first time in more than six years, which had been widely expected.
Oil traded cautiously ahead of an Opec meeting in Vienna later in the day, with members set to debate an extension of the group’s supply-cut agreement.
While the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries and key non-member Russia look set to prolong oil supply cuts until the end of 2018, they have signalled that they may review the deal when they meet again in June if the market overheats.
US crude futures traded at $57.41 per barrel in early Asian trade, up 0.2%, while Brent futures rose 0.4% to $63.37 a barrel.



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