By Chris Prentice
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Asia shares were set to open lower on Wednesday, following a choppy trading session on Wall Street and losses in Europe.
Hong Kong futures
Spot gold
Wall Street shares ended higher after choppy trade as hopes mounted U.S. leaders would agree on another coronavirus stimulus package. The Dow Jones Industrial Average <.dji> gained 0.62%, the S&P 500 <.spx> rose 0.36% and the Nasdaq Composite <.ixic> added 0.35%.
White House negotiators late Tuesday vowed to work “around the clock” to reach a spending deal by the end of the week, but the Treasury Secretary warned they were not “going anywhere close” to the $3.4 trillion Democratic leaders sought.
U.S. lawmakers missed a deadline last week to extend the $600 per week enhanced unemployment payments. The payments are key element of the Democrats’ proposal, but Senate Republicans have proposed to significantly slash the benefits.
“U.S. consumer spending was stalling in July with the extra unemployment payments. Without the extra payments, U.S. consumer spending could fall in August,” Commonwealth Bank of Australia economists said in a note.
The stimulus expectations on Tuesday sent gold prices above the key $2,000 mark for the first time in history and lifted crude oil futures
Bullion also got a boost as treasury bond yields fell to new lows, National Australia Bank analysts said on Wednesday. The five-year treasury yield hit a record low and the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield dropped to a five-month trough, indicating dim investor outlook for the U.S. economic recovery.
In Europe, shares slid. Spirits maker Diageo Plc
Goldman Sachs said it expects coronavirus travel restrictions to hit FY20 results and the forward view of Qantas
Senior U.S. and Chinese officials will review a trade deal and likely air mutual grievances in an increasingly tense relationship during an Aug. 15 videoconference, sources said.
China’s U.S. envoy on Tuesday said Beijing does not want tensions to escalate.
(Reporting by Chris Prentice in Washington; Editing by Stephen Coates)