The euro was not far from a two-year low against the dollar and a
near 12-year low against the yen, as the single currency was undermined by
Moody's Investors Service changing its ratings outlook to negative for
Aaa-rated Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg amid Europe's ongoing debt
crisis.
With market sentiment so fragile, the HSBC China
July flash PMI due to be released at 22:30 EDT (0230 GMT) could set the tone
for risk appetite as investors look for signs of a stabilisation in the
slowdown in the world's second-largest economy. Euro zone's manufacturing data
is also due later on Tuesday.
Fears about Spain possibly needing a fully-fledged
bailout, intensified investor flight to safety and pushed the 10-year U.S.
Treasury yield down to a record low 1.3977 percent, while five- and 10-year
German government bond yields also set new lows on Monday.
In contrast, Spanish 10-year borrowing costs
surged to a euro-era high above 7.5 percent on Monday.
Andrew Wilkinson, chief economic strategist at
Miller Tabak & Co in New York, said the flattening of the Spanish yield
curve reflected how investors have grown increasingly concerned about perceived
risks facing Spain.
"Rising yields are in turn adding to a sense
of crisis: If the regions ask for cash, how will the government fund itself?
The brave Spanish matador appears to be pinned to the perimeter fence by the
angry bull," Wilkinson said.
Spain faces a crucial litmus test later on Tuesday
with its debt sale of 3 billion euros in 3- and 6-month bills.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares
outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS was steady, after tumbling 2.4 percent on Monday
for its biggest one-day drop in about two months, while Japan's Nikkei stock
average .N225 opened down 0.1 percent, after slumping to a six-week low on
Monday. .T
European stocks sank on Monday on Spanish jitters
but a ban on short selling unveiled by the Italian and Spanish market
authorities to discourage speculative trading helped limit the damage on local
stocks.
The euro was at $1.2123, off a 25-month low of $1.2067
hit on Monday, and stood at 94.90 yen, barely above its lowest since November
2000 of around 94.23 yen marked on Monday.
Profit taking spared the euro from hitting record
lows against the Australian and New Zealand dollars on Tuesday.
Hong Kong's stock market will delay its opening on
Tuesday morning due to Typhoon Vicente.
GREECE ENTERS AGAIN
Greece, which only last month averted a crisis by
having pro-bailout parties win an election, is scheduled on Tuesday to meet its
troika of creditors -- the European Union, European Central Bank and the
International Monetary Fund -- to renegotiate rescue payments which are crucial
to keeping indebted Athens afloat and within the euro zone.
The uncertainty over whether Greece could convince
creditors to secure the funds compounded fears Madrid's funding crisis could
accelerate after Spain's central bank said on Monday the economy sank deeper
into recession in the second quarter.
Various gauges for stress on Monday reflected
mounting market nervousness about financial contagion from the fiscal woes in
Spain and Greece.
The CBOE Volatility index .VIX, which measures
expected volatility in the Standard & Poor's 500 index
finance/markets/index?symbol=us%21spx">.SPX over the next 30 days,
jumped 14.4 percent to close at 18.62.
Risk premiums in the dollar funding market also
rose, widening the spread between the two-year U.S. interest swap rate and
two-year Treasuries, as well as the gap between the London interbank offered
rate and the overnight indexed swap rate for three-month dollars.
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