By Tom Miles
HONG KONG, May 22 (Reuters) - Asian share markets slid for the third straight day on Thursday after the U.S. Federal Reserve slashed the U.S. economic growth forecast and oil surged above $135 a barrel, re-kindling fears of 1980s-style stagflation.
Minutes from the Federal Reserve's April 29-30 policy meeting warned that mounting concerns over inflation would make further interest rate cuts unlikely. [
]The revival of the Fed's concern about the health of the U.S. economy tarnished the attractions of the dollar, despite the prospect of steady interest rates.
"The Fed is in a difficult position now because it's not the U.S. economy that is driving inflation but the Chinese," said Damien Boey, equity strategist at Credit Suisse First Boston in Australia.
"So we end up with the situation where rather than inflation being a sign of strong demand, inflation actually eats into the consumer purchasing power."
The euro <EUR=>, aided by a surprise improvement in German business sentiment, rose above $1.5800 to hit a one-month high. [
]. Against the yen <JPY=>, the dollar plumbed its lowest in 10 days, moving as low as 102.76 yen.The dollar's weakness only added to the appeal of crude oil <CLc1>, which powered to a fresh record of $135.04 a barrel after U.S. stocks of crude oil, which analysts had expected to swell by 600,000 barrels in the week to May 16, instead dried up to the tune of 5.4 million barrels, reaching 320.4 million. [
]"The huge draw in crude inventories was surprising. All focus is on bullish factors. You simply have to follow the trend and buy now," said Tatsuo Kageyama, an analyst at Kanetsu Asset Management in Tokyo.
"You really cannot forecast how much further the market will rally now. All I can say is the market will continue to rise," Kageyama said.
The strong demand for oil and fear of inflation has spurred renewed buying of gold <XAU=>, which rose above $935 an ounce for the first time in a month. Gold attained a record $1,000 lustre earlier this year as the equity market slumped but it fell back below $850 after the panic subsided.
BUFFETTED
The Fed's warning and the oil price surge cut the legs from May's stock market rally and saddled U.S. stocks with their worst losses in two weeks.
The Dow Jones industrial average <
> fell 1.8 percent and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.SPX> slipped 1.6 percent. The S&P Financials sub-index <.GSPF> lost 2.8 percent, its worst performance in a month.Japan's Nikkei average <
> fell more than 1.3 percent by 0125 GMT. Stocks across the rest of Asia, gauged by the MSCI index <.MIAPJ0000PUS>, declined 0.6 percent. The index has fallen for the third consecutive day.Prices for benchmark 10-year Japanese government bonds <2JGBv1>, which have rebounded in the past week after a two-month slump, traded at 135.66, unmoved on the day.
Fretful investors got little comfort from Warren Buffett, the world's richest person, who said that the economic pain was likely to run for a while longer and could get worse.
"I think the tidal wave that hit various financial institutions since last August has largely been recognised and felt," Buffett told a news conference in Madrid at the end of a European tour.
"In terms of the effect on the economy in the United States, we don't know, but I think it will be longer and deeper then many people do. There could well be a lot to come."
But he said that for banks at least the worst was probably behind them after the Federal Reserve staved off "really contagious financial panic" with its intervention to prop up investment bank Bear Stearns <BSC.N>.