(Repeats to more subscribers)
* Asian shares fall as U.S. consumer confidence weighs
* Aussie dlr at 2-wk low as mkt trims bets on large rate rise
* Won, rupiah sold as investors curb exposure to risky assets
* U.S. equity futures down 0.1 pct
By Susan Fenton
HONG KONG, Oct 28 (Reuters) - Asian shares fell on Wednesday after a dip in U.S. consumer confidence revived worries about the pace of economic recovery, while the Australian dollar hit a two-week low as inflation data pared bets on an aggressive rate rise.
U.S. equity futures <SPc1> were down 0.1 percent and European shares were also set to dip, with financial spreadbetters expecting markets in London <
>, Frankfurt < > and Paris < > to open between 0.3 and 0.6 percent lower [ ]The Conference Board's weaker-than-expected U.S. consumer confidence index for October raised concern about the U.S. earnings potential of Asian companies, driving shares lower across the region. [
]"The U.S. consumer confidence news highlighted worries about the U.S. economic recovery in the coming months," a dealer at a Japanese bank in Tokyo, said. "With this view, investors are prone to cut their bets on assets such as stocks, commodities and high-yielding currencies."
Japan's Nikkei index <
> fell 1.4 percent as a government official warned the economy must try to avoid hitting a second bottom [ ] and Japanese retail sales in September fell for a 13th month. [ ]Shares in Honda Motor Co <7267.T>, however, surged 3.3 percent after the world's seventh-biggest carmaker surprised by nearly tripling its annual profit forecasts on Tuesday. [
]The Australian dollar <AUD=> first edged up, but later retreated, after last quarter's inflation topped forecasts, yet was not seen as alarming enough to warrant a 50 basis point rate rise at a central bank meeting on Nov. 3. [
]"This number's just not bad enough to trigger anything other than a quarter point rate rise," said Stephen Walters, chief economist at JP Morgan in Australia.
The Australian dollar rose to as high as $0.9208 immediately after the inflation data but then fell to a two-week low of $0.9072.
SHIPBUILDERS HIT
Worries about U.S. consumer confidence encouraged a shift out of riskier currencies including the Korean won <KRW=>. It hit a one-month low at 1,195.5 per dollar, brushing off news that South Korea's balance of payments surplus in September soared nearly 60 percent to a near five-year high. [
]Indonesia's central bank intervened to prop up the rupiah <IDR=> as it hit a one-month low at 9,650 to the dollar.
The head of China's national pension fund said on Wednesday that the dollar-dominated global monetary system would gradually shift to a system led by the dollar, euro and Asian currencies including the Chinese yuan <CNY=CFXS>. [
]The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks traded outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> was down 2 percent while the Thomson Reuters index of regional shares <.TRXFLDAXPU> was 1.4 percent lower.
Shares in Korea <
> slumped 2.4 percent as investors became nervous ahead of key earnings and economic data this week.Samsung Electronics <005930.KS>, the world's biggest memory chip maker, issued a strong mid-term outlook but its shares fell 3 percent in the market slide. [
]Shipbuilders also suffered after the Financial Times reported that leading German container shipper Peter Dohle Schiffahrts was seeking aid from the German government. That sent shares in Hyundai Heavy Industries <009540.KS>, the world's biggest shipbuilder, down 4.5 percent.
Investor sentiment across Asia was cautious amid concern about the pace of recovery in the United States although a survey by The Nielsen Company on Wednesday showed U.S. consumer confidence has improved for the first time since early 2007. [
]U.S. durable goods data, due later on Wednesday, will give further clues on the state of U.S. consumption.
In Hong Kong, shares of casino operator Wynn Macau <1128.HK> plunged 8.3 percent, tracking a 10 percent dive in shares of its U.S. parent Wynn Resorts <WYNN.O> in U.S. trade, after a downbeat outlook from the company. [
]The oil price <CLc1> stabilised at around $79.40 a barrel after rising overnight on industry data showing a large draw-down in U.S. crude inventories last week.
Japanese government bonds inched up with futures coming off a two-month low after strong demand for new U.S. two-year notes lifted U.S. Treasuries.
December JGB 10-year futures <JP2YTN=JBTC> climbed 0.04 point to 137.90 after hitting a two-month low of 138.82 on Tuesday. (Additional reporting by Kaori Kaneko in TOKYO and the SYDNEY newsroom; editing by Tomasz Janowski)