Asian markets slip on US debt row

Asian markets slip on US debt row
Updated on

Summary Asian markets slipped after a US committee charged with finding a deal to cut nations huge deficit.

Asian markets mostly slipped Tuesday with growing concerns over France’s credit rating and after a US committee charged with finding a deal to cut the nation’s huge deficit said it had failed.Investors extended the broad sell-off to a fifth straight session as leaders on both sides of the Atlantic struggle to agree on a way out of their respective debt crises, which have sent global markets tumbling. In early trade Tokyo was 0.13 percent off, Shanghai was 0.36 percent down, Sydney gave up 0.47 percent and Hong Kong shed 0.13 percent, while Seoul gained 0.24 percent.In Washington Monday the 12-member bipartisan “supercommittee” said it was unable to meet its mission of cutting the US deficit by $1.2 trillion over 10 years.Many had expected the panel -- set up in August as part of a last-minute deal to raise the debt ceiling and avoid a devastating default -- to fail due to political feuds over tax hikes on the rich and cuts to social spending.“Investors are seeing this situation as further evidence that the lights are on but no one’s at home’ when it comes to political leadership of the worlds major economies, said Ric Spooner, Chief Market Analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney.An increase in Pariss borrowing costs, slowing growth and the eurozone debt crisis was posing a threat to the countrys top-notch status, the agency said.France pays almost twice as much to borrow on the bond markets as Germany, it pointed out, despite the government slashing spending and tightening up on tax revenues in an effort to stabilise its strained public finances. However, Moodys said France’s rating was safe for the moment.