* AIG results weigh on financial sector
* Oil below $119, down around $30 from record high
* G7 recession becomes real possibility (Repeats to more subscribers with no change to text)
By Kevin Plumberg
HONG KONG, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Asian stocks fell on Thursday, as a sustained decline in oil prices could not shake a sense of gloom among investors about financial sector instability and the worsening global growth outlook.
European stock markets were expected to open as much as 0.5 percent lower, according to futures markets, after European insurer Allianz <ALVG.DE> warned about its profit forecast for 2009 and the world's largest insurer American International Group Inc <AIG.N> chalked up a quarterly net loss of $5 billion.
Dealers expected Barclays Plc <BARC.L> to fall as much as 3 percent at the open after the bank said first-half profits fell 33 percent on $4 billion of write downs, though that was not as bad as expected.
The U.S. dollar slipped against the yen after jumping to a seven-month high on Wednesday. It was also slightly weaker against the euro ahead of a European Central Bank policy decision due later, widely expected to keep interest rates on hold at 4.25 percent.
Crude oil was trading just below $119 a barrel <CLc1>, having tumbled nearly 20 percent from July's record high, as expectations for U.S. energy demand continue to deteriorate.
Concerns about wavering demand in China, whose economy has devoured natural resources for the last decade and pushed up commodity prices, also weighed on copper prices.
Lower oil prices could be interpreted as relief for U.S. consumers, on whom Asia depends for export demand. But inflation was still a global threat, bad loans continued to dog banks and insurers, and investors faced the prospect that all of the Group of Seven rich nations could slip into recession.
As a result, optimism was in short supply.
"Certainly the environment is one that should be positive, with the weaker yen and lower oil prices," said Hideyuki Ishiguro, supervisor at the investment strategy department at Okasan Securities in Tokyo. "But the idea that Japan's economy isn't good is spreading."
Japan's Nikkei share average <
> fell about 1 percent, led by an 11 percent drop in shares of air-conditioner maker Daikin Industries Ltd <6367.T> after the company cut its earnings outlook because of sluggish sales in Europe.Shortly after the market closed in Japan, Toyota Motor Corp <7203.T>, the world's biggest car maker, said quarterly net profit fell 28 percent but it kept its forecasts unchanged.
Outside Japan, Asia-Pacific stocks <.MIAPJ0000PUS> were largely unchanged, but within sight of a 16-month low plumbed on Tuesday.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index <
> rose 0.6 percent, lifted by a 1.7 percent rise in shares of HSBC Holdings <0005.HK>.Cathay Pacific Airways <0293.HK> was the top percentage decliner on the index, down 4.6 percent, after the airline on Wednesday posted its first interim loss in five years.
CENTRAL BANK DILEMMA
South Korea's benchmark KOSPI <
> dropped 0.9 percent, weighed down by the financial sector after the Bank of Korea on Thursday raised its main interest rate by a quarter percentage point to its highest in 7-