(Repeats to more Asian subscribers)
By Tom Miles
HONG KONG, April 29 (Reuters) - Asian investors fine-tuned their portfolios on Tuesday ahead of a U.S. interest rate decision later this week, trimming shareholdings in trade that was made even thinner by the start of Tokyo's holiday season.
In the hesitant atmosphere, oil prices also retreated more than one dollar from Monday's record of close to $120 a barrel.
Investors are anxious to see if the U.S. Federal Reserve will draw a line under the credit crisis on Wednesday by signalling its run of rate cuts is coming to an end. Speculation is high that it will trim its funds rate by a slim 25 basis points to 2.0 percent and signal a desire to hold rates there for the time being. (For more, click on [
])."Whenever we get a Fed meeting, it always takes a lot out of the market," said Lucinda Chan, division director at Macquarie Equities.
"While a 25 basis point interest rate cut is widely anticipated, there are hints that this may be the last one for a while as well. People are just a little bit hesitant at the moment."
In normal times equity investors favour lower interest rates, but their precipitous decline has weakened the dollar and come to symbolise the fear of a U.S. recession, two factors that have rattled stock markets worldwide in the last six months.
With Japanese markets closed, stocks across the rest of Asia, gauged by MSCI's index <.MIAPJ0000PUS>, slipped 0.3 percent by 0217 GMT.
That followed a 0.16 fall in the Dow Jones industrial average <
> percent on Monday, where the biggest U.S. takeover deal proposed this year helped offset the comments by influential investor Warren Buffett, one of the deal's backers, that the country could face a long and deep recession.GUMMY BEAR
Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway <BRKa.N> will help finance Mars Inc's $23 billion offer for Wm Wrigley Jr Co <WWY.N>, the world's largest chewing gum maker. [
]The offer showed signs of life in the moribund U.S. merger and acquisition market and underscored the notion that stocks are relatively cheap, That helped financial stocks overcome a report from Morgan Stanley that predicted more profit headwinds for several large U.S. banks, including Bank of America Corp <BAC.N>.
Buffett's comments on the U.S. economy revived the spectre of recession just as some investors were hoping to have seen the bottom of the market.
"This is not a field of specialty for me, but my general feeling is that the recession will be longer and deeper than most people think," Buffett told CNBC television. "This will not be short and shallow."
On Wednesday, the U.S. Commerce Department is expected to say how fast the economy grew in the first quarter. Economists on average have projected that gross domestic product grew at an annualised 0.2 percent rate in the quarter. [
]The U.S. economy has had to endure ballooning raw materials costs as the weakening dollar helped boost dollar-based prices.
"I think consumers are feeling gas and food prices and not feeling they've got a lot of money for other things," Buffett said.
PAULSON REASSURES
U.S. crude oil futures <CLc1> hit a record high of $119.93 on Monday because of supply worries caused by attacks in Nigeria and the closure of a British oil pipeline following a refinery strike. The price had trickled back to $118.53 by 0211 GMT on Tuesday.
The strike at Scotland's Grangemouth refinery is expected to end on Tuesday, allowing the refinery and pipeline to reopen, the refinery owner Ineos has said. [
].The high cost of fuel has also troubled airlines such as Korean Air Co <003490.KS>, the world's top cargo carrier, which slid 4.4 percent.
"If oil prices remain high, the company's earnings are seen hurt for a long time," said Baik Ji-ae, an analyst at Tongyang Investment Bank.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said on Monday that the economy was facing "headwinds" in the form of rising oil prices and commodity costs, but insisted its long-term economic fundamentals remained sound.
"I think there's a concern that supply is tight, could get tighter and there's a potential for disruption down the road," he said.
He denied that there was any sign of 1970s-type "stagflation" threatening the economy, in which growth slows and prices shoot up simultaneously.
"We are seeing nothing like that today," he said, "Core inflation is well contained."
(Editing by Kim Coghill)
(Additional reporting by Geraldine Chua in SYDNEY)