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GLOBAL MARKETS-Asia tech shares spooked by phone warning, oil near highs

Published 2018-04-20, 02:52 a/m
© Reuters.  GLOBAL MARKETS-Asia tech shares spooked by phone warning, oil near highs
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* Tech shares follow Apple lower after chipmaker warning

* Oil prices just off highs, supported as supply tightens

* Inflation unease pushes up long-term bond yields

* Sterling skids after BoE's Carney sounds dovish

By Wayne Cole

SYDNEY, April 20 (Reuters) - Asian shares slipped on Friday as a warning on smartphone demand from the world's largest contract chipmaker slugged the tech sector, while high oil prices stirred inflation fears and undermined sovereign bonds.

Spreadbetters pointed to a firm start for European shares, with FTSE futures up 0.3 percent FFIc1 but E-Minis for S&P 500 ESc1 were a tad softer as were Dow futures 1YMc1 .

In Asia, Apple AAPL.O led the way after Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing 2330.TW cut its revenue target to the low end of forecasts and blamed softer demand for smartphones. big story for the APAC region today will be fallout from TSMC's miss, which will weigh heavily on the tech sector, with first order impacts on the Semis and Samsung (KS:005930) Electronics/ Galaxy supply chain," analysts at JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) said in a note.

"The miss appears largely to have been due to Apple iPhones, and so may also weigh on the Apple supply chain."

Taiwan's main index .TWII slid 1.8 percent with techs sinking 3.5 percent and TSMC off more than 6 percent.

Stocks in South Korea .KS11 took a 0.5 percent dip.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS shed 1.1 percent, again led by a 1.6 percent fall in technology.

Japan's Nikkei .N225 eased 0.1 percent as the drop is tech outweight the gains in energy and financials. .T

Wall Street had also been hit by weak results from tobacco company Philip Morris PM.N , which sent its shares down as much as 17.7 percent and dragged on the S&P 500. .N

The Dow .DJI ended down 0.34 percent, while the S&P 500 .SPX lost 0.57 percent and the Nasdaq .IXIC 0.78 percent.

INFLATION FUEL

Oil prices eased a bit after hitting their highest since late 2014 on drawdowns in global supply and as Saudi Arabia looks to fatten its export revenue. O/R

Brent crude futures LCOc1 were off 10 cents to $73.68 a barrel, while U.S. crude CLc1 slipped 20 cents to $68.09.

A global oil glut has been virtually eliminated, according to a joint OPEC and non-OPEC technical panel, two sources familiar with the matter said, thanks in part to an OPEC-led supply cut deal in place since January 2017. at CBA noted market measures of inflation expectations had spiked higher this week as oil prices surged, with some hitting highs not seen since mid-2014.

That in turn pressured fixed-income debt with yields on 10-year Treasuries US10YT=RR jumping to a one-month top at 2.93 percent. They had last eased slightly to 2.91 percent.

Yields are up 10 basis points in just two days, the sharpest move since early February.

In currency markets, the main mover was sterling which dived late on Thursday when Bank of England Governor Mark Carney cooled expectations for an interest rate hike in May, pointing out there were "other meetings" this year. dropped more than a cent to $1.4078 GBP=D4 , leaving the week's peak of $1.4373 a distant memory.

The sudden retreat in sterling helped support the U.S. dollar more broadly and the dollar index .DXY was steady at 89.986.

The euro also eased back a touch to $1.2336 EUR= , while the dollar inched up on the yen to 107.55 JPY= and looked set to test the recent top at 107.78.

On the radar later in the day will be IMF and World Bank meetings in Washington where free trade and protectionism are certain to be high on the agenda along with Sino-U.S. tensions.

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