Asia stocks falter, NZ dlr stumbles as RBNZ signals hikes over

Asia stocks falter, NZ dlr stumbles as RBNZ signals hikes over

TOKYO: Asian stocks on Wednesday extended a global sell-off as U.S. debt ceiling negotiations

dragged on without resolution, while the New Zealand dollar tumbled after the central bank caught markets off-guard by flagging that its tightening cycle is over.

The U.S. dollar - paradoxically - remained elevated amid safe-haven demand, which was also a driver of Treasuries and pushed yields lower.

Crude gained, though, as a warning from the Saudi energy minister to speculators raised the prospect of further OPEC+ output cuts.

The New Zealand dollar was one of the major movers in the early Asian day. It dropped more than 1% after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand wrong-footed markets by signalling it's done with its policy tightening cycle, after raising it by a quarter point. Market pricing had favoured a half-point hike, and were also primed for an extension of the tightening streak.

Japan's Nikkei sank 1.1%, extending its retreat from a post-bubble-era peak to a second day.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng declined 1.2%, and mainland blue chips slid 0.8%.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares fell 0.7%.

U.S. equity futures stabilised slightly after sharp declines for the main indexes S&P 500 and the Nasdaq overnight.

Representatives of President Joe Biden and congressional Republicans ended another round