ASX at the close

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Angus Nicholson for Chris Weston, Chief Market Strategist at IG Markets

Asian markets followed Europe’s lead downwards as concerns over Turkey’s downing of a Russian jet seemed to add to ongoing market concerns.

While the dispute between Turkey and Russia is unlikely to escalate into a “hot” conflict, it does underline the unresolved tensions over how to put an end to the unrest in Syria and Iraq. This uncertainty around a further escalation of the conflict in the Middle East has hung heavily over Asian markets with all indices in the region seeing red.

Strong US Q3 GDP numbers and Case-Shiller House Prices served to push the WIRP bond market probability of a December Fed rate hike up to 74%. Despite this, the US dollar has been seeing a pullback. During the Asian session almost all Asia-Pacific currencies have gained during the session with the Malaysian ringgit, Korean won and Taiwanese dollar seeing the strongest performances.

The Aussie dollar gained 0.7% overnight. This was boosted by short-covering in the metals complex and Glenn Stevens arguing that he didn’t believe a further rate cut would help the economy much and he was loath to “smash savers over the head”.

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China

Nervousness around China’s forthcoming PMI releases was heightened today with the release with the little-known Minxin PMI pointing to a decline in November from October. Were this result to be borne out in the Caixin and NBS PMIs next week, it could have a major repercussions in global equity and commodity markets as concerns that Chinese has not done enough to ease its slowdown continue to mount.

However, the key growth engine of the “New Normal” Chinese economy – consumption – was given a boost today as the Westpac-MNI consumer sentiment indicator bounced back in November. While China’s secondary sector continues to slow, a collapse in consumption or tertiary sector growth would really start to ring warning bells about a potential financial crisis.

Japan

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The yen strengthened on safe-haven buying spurred by Middle East tension concerns. The JPY gained 0.4% against the USD. This provided some headwinds to the Nikkei, which was down 0.6%, led by the financials sector.

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) minutes further underlined the BoJ’s reluctance to further extend their QQE monetary easing policy. BoJ members were keen to emphasise positives around the economy, while little notice was paid to the fact that Japan entered a technical recession in Q3. Japanese services PPI held steady at 0.5% year-on-year expansion.

Australia

Australia Q3 construction activity came in below expectations for 2% quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) decline, falling 3.6%. This partly looks to have been driven by a drop back in Western Australia activity after the installation of Chevron’s 37,000 tonne gas-processing platform. Despite the poor number, the different accounting methodologies between the construction activity quarterly index and Australia’s GDP means this number is unlikely to materially alter expectations for Australian Q3 GDP due out next week.

While Australian internet-based skilled vacancies continued their four-month run of positive month-on-month expansion, rising 0.6% in October. Another data point supporting the steadily strengthening employment situation in Australia.

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