Asia stocks edge as China's property sector collapses

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Asia stocks edge as China's property sector collapses

The logo of China Evergrande is seen at the China Evergrande Centre building in Hong Kong.

SINGAPORE Reuters - Asian stocks eked small gains on Thursday but the upbeat mood that lifted the Dow Jones and bitcoin to records ebbed on fresh worries about China's property sector after an asset sale at embattled developer Evergrande collapsed.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan edged 0.3% higher to touch a one-month top. The Japanese Nikkei fell 0.3% and the S&P 500 futures were flat.

Currencies and commodities were broadly steady, leaving risk-sensitive units like the Australian at multi-month highs while Brent crude futures inched up to a new three-year peak of $86.10 a barrel.

Late on Wednesday, China Evergrande, the heavily indebted developer at the center of a credit crunch in China's real estate sector, said it abandoned a $2.6 billion sale of a stake in a subsidiary and that it had made no progress on other sales.

Its shares dropped 10% at the open in Hong Kong and the company will be in default if a 30 day grace period due to expire over the weekend without the payment of a dollar bond coupon passes.

Shares in rival developers drew support on Thursday thanks to reassurance from a number of top Chinese officials that the trouble in the sector would not be allowed to escalate into a full-blown crisis, but global investors remain nervous.

If you looked at your screen you would think that the world is a pretty happy place, said Andrew Ticehurst, a rate strategist at Nomura in Sydney.

The U.S. stock market has gone up for six days in a row, bitcoin's made a record and the U.S. bond market is calm. On the surface it looks benign, he said.

But below the surface we are uncomfortable about a number of things, he added, chiefly the slowdown in China's economy seen in data earlier this week, and concerns about potential fallout from Evergrande's troubles.

Overnight on Wall Street, strong earnings helped the Dow Jones touch a record peak during trade and the S&P 500 rose 0.4% to finish within a whisker of its record closing high. The Nasdaq eased slightly. N The VIX volatility index, sometimes referred to as Wall Street's fear gauge, dropped to a two-month low.

Longer-dated Treasury yields rose on expectations of growth and inflation and the benchmark 10 year Treasury yield made a five-month high of 1.673% on Wednesday. It last sat just below that level at 1.6656% in the Tokyo session.

Investors have figured that rising energy prices and tightening job markets will pressure policymakers in the United States and elsewhere to raise interest rates before long.

Fed funds futures have priced a 25 basis point rate hike in the second quarter of 2022 while eurodollar markets expect higher rates as soon as the third quarter.

Even more aggressive moves in the Antipodean rates markets - along with strong commodity prices - have helped the Australian and New Zealand dollars to sharp gains in recent sessions.

All is apparently well, the shindig is on and therefore no one wants the big dollar, said Rodrigo Catril, senior currency strategist at National Australia BankAustralia Bank, in a note to clients.

The Aussie was last up 0.3% at a 15 week high of $0.7541 on Thursday, while the kiwi rose 0.1% to a more-than-four-month peak of $0.7210. FRX The euro and the yen were steady, with the yen at 114.33 per dollar and a euro buying $1.1662.

Bitcoin, which hit a record on Wednesday in the wake of the listing of a futures-based exchange traded fund, eased from its peak to $64,651 while fellow cryptocurrency ether hit a record.