Japane stocks slide, dollar at 8-month low, Euro holds

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Asian stocks were pegged back on Friday, with Japanese shares hitting a four-week low and the dollar languishing around an eight-month trough as the U.S. budget standoff dragged on, building fears of increasingly serious economic consequences.

Tokyo's Nikkei fell 0.7% after shedding as much as 1.5% to its lowest since September 6, taking its cue from the U.S. S&P 500, which suffered its ninth loss in 11 sessions overnight.

Financial bookmakers expected European shares to open modestly weaker.

President Barack Obama met Republican and Democrat leaders in Congress but reiterated in a speech that he would not give in to Republican demands to roll back his healthcare programme in exchange for reopening the government.

The debt ceiling is far more important than a partial U.S. government shutdown, which began on Tuesday, since it could lead to an unprecedented default by the United States, an outcome the market assumes is unthinkable.

BNP Paribas analysts said it was increasingly possible that the standoff in Washington would continue until the debt ceiling deadline on October 17.

The shutdown has delayed the closely-watched nonfarm payrolls data, normally out on Friday. The data is a key factor for the Federal Reserve to consider when deciding to scale back its stimulus.

Two senior Fed officials warned on Thursday of damaging consequences if the country defaults on its debt and said U.S. monetary policy is being kept easier to help offset the harm caused by the political wrangling in the Capitol Hill.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan eased 0.1%. Seoul shares slipped 0.1%, though Samsung Electronics Co Ltd added 0.5% after the index heavyweight estimated its July-September earnings rose 25% to a record $9.4 bln.

Currency dealers said they suspected that South Korean authorities intervened in the foreign exchange market, buying dollars to push the Korean won off what was its strongest level in more than eight months.

The dollar was also hurt by slower growth in the U.S. services sector in September.

EURO LOOKING UP

The euro was steady at $1.36255, not far from an eight-month high of $1.36465 touched on Thursday. The common currency was also aided by the European Central Bank's apparent lack of concern over the euro's recent strength and better-than-expected euro zone data.

"The euro has become an island of stability in global asset markets … Peripheral yields are higher and more stable than in the U.S. and equity markets keep outperforming," Citigroup said in a report.

Against a basket of major currencies, the greenback was near an eight-month trough.

The dollar eased 0.2% on the day to 97.105 yen , after hitting a five-week low of 96.93 on Thursday, as the Bank of Japan stood pat on monetary policy as expected.

The BOJ revised up its assessment on capital expenditure, encouraged by growing signs that the benefits of its stimulus policy are broadening.

Brent crude slipped 0.2% to around $108.8 a barrel, adding to a 0.2% decline overnight, as the slower service sector growth in September compounded worries about raw materials demand due to the U.S. budget crisis and government shutdown.

Copper prices stabilised after tumbling 1.3% on Thursday.