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NewsDay

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Asian shares, euro dip on S&P warning

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SINGAPORE — Asian stocks and the euro fell yesterday after ratings agency Standard&Poor (S&P)’s warned it might downgrade eurozone countries en masse if European leaders fail to produce a credible plan to solve the region’s debt crisis at a summit later this week. The unprecedented warning brought to a halt a rally in global equities […]

SINGAPORE — Asian stocks and the euro fell yesterday after ratings agency Standard&Poor (S&P)’s warned it might downgrade eurozone countries en masse if European leaders fail to produce a credible plan to solve the region’s debt crisis at a summit later this week.

The unprecedented warning brought to a halt a rally in global equities that began last week and had continued on Monday, when the leaders of France and Germany agreed a plan aimed at guiding the region out of its two-year-old crisis.

“We are entering a critical stage,” said Kenichi Hirano, operating officer at Tachibana Securities in Tokyo.

“There are high market expectations for positive developments out of the European leaders’ meeting this week and if there are any indications that decisions will be pushed back it will have negative consequences for the market.”

Oil and copper prices also retreated after the S&P statement, which came late in the US trading day, while Wall Street index futures fell and United States Treasury yields edged down, indicating investors were seeking safety in the dollar.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan fell 1,1%, with the heaviest losses in the growth-sensitive materials sector.

Tokyo’s Nikkei share average fell 0,8%, while S&P 500 futures eased 0,2%, pointing to a lower start for Wall Street after Monday’s 1% gain.

S&P said it had told 15 of the 17 eurozone countries, including Germany, France and four others with the top AAA credit rating, that it might downgrade them within 90 days, depending on the outcome of Friday’s summit.

The warning took the sheen off a Franco-German agreement, to be put to other member states on Friday, to impose budget discipline across the currency area through European Union treaty changes.