BREAKING NEWS

Asian stocks flat as trade woes offset earnings-led Wall Street gains

TOKYO - Asian stocks were largely steady on Tuesday, with worries over the US-China trade conflict offsetting support from earnings-led gains on Wall Street.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was almost flat.
Australian stocks dipped 0.2 percent, South Korea's KOSPI rose 0.05 percent and Japan's Nikkei added 0.25 percent.
The three major US stock indexes closed higher on Monday amid a strong US earnings season, with results from Berkshire Hathaway impressing and Facebook lifting the Nasdaq after a report it was planning new services.
"Global markets are (being) buffeted by conflicting currents. The bottom-up view of the world from a corporate perspective is positive, led by US companies," wrote Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets.
"However, the increasing potential for trade disputes to slow the global economy is restraining investor enthusiasm."
The dollar drew support as international trade tensions continue. Its index against a basket of six major currencies rose to a near three-week high of 95.515, before pulling back slightly to 95.347.
Some analysts see trade conflict benefiting the US dollar as the nation's economy is better placed to handle protectionism than emerging markets, and as tariffs may narrow the US trade deficit.
Weakness in its peers further bolstered the dollar's strength.
The euro fell to a five-week low of $1.1530 overnight, weighed down by worries that Italy could ramp up spending and challenge European Union budget regulations and by a drop in June German industrial orders. The single currency last traded at $1.1557.
The pound was also on the back foot, driven on Monday to $1.2920, its weakest since September 2017, after comments by officials raised fears Britain would crash out of the EU without securing a trade agreement.
The dollar was steady at 111.35 yen after edging up 0.1 percent overnight.
A big mover was the Turkish lira, which fell to a record low on Monday after Washington said it was reviewing Ankara's duty-free access to the US market as tensions between the two NATO allies ramped up.
The lira has lost 27 percent of its value this year, battered primarily by concerns about President Tayyip Erdogan's drive for greater control over monetary policy.
"Currently the impact of the lira's slide is mostly contained within the country. But fears of a default will begin to increase if the currency keeps depreciating, and such a development could affect some European financial institutions," said Kota Hirayama, senior emerging markets economist at SMBC Nikko Securities.
"The Turkish central bank will have to move quickly and raise interest rates to arrest the lira's fall before it becomes too late."
In commodities, benchmark Brent crude oil futures were down 0.05 percent at $73.71 a barrel. They had gained 0.75 percent on Monday after OPEC sources said Saudi production had unexpectedly fallen in July.