By Tom Miles
HONG KONG, April 14 (Reuters) - Asian shares lurched lower on Monday as a nasty earnings surprise from General Electric Co <GE.N> and a 26-year low in U.S. consumer sentiment drowned out the Group of Seven nation's support for the dollar.
But the dollar's gain helped to push U.S. crude oil <CLc1> back below $110 a barrel. It was trading down 32 cents at $109.82. Prices for gold <XAU=> fell 1 percent to $916.60/7.40 an ounce as the dollar's rise outweighed buying of the safe-haven asset.
After six months of red ink, equity investors are aching to feel the bottom of the market, the moment to pick up value stocks at a bargain.
But their tentative forays into buying have been snuffed out again and again by signs of a U.S. recession that could hurt companies worldwide.
GE's unexpected 6 percent profit drop on Friday was the biggest shock yet to the U.S. industrial sector from the credit crisis and cast a shadow over the upcoming quarterly earnings season. [
]Shares of GE, viewed as an economic bellwether because of the range of its businesses, sank almost 13 percent in their worst decline since the October 1987 market crash.
"The fact that it missed expectations really has spooked investors that the reporting season is going to show that the slowdown in the U.S. is impacting corporate profits much more than was expected," said Juliette Saly, a market analyst at CommSec.
The mood was worsened by April's preliminary index of confidence from the Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers which hit its lowest level since 1982, when the economy was plagued by low growth and high inflation. [
]Japan's Nikkei average index <
> was 2.7 percent lower by 0047 GMT, while shares across the rest of Asia, gauged by MSCI's index <.MIAPJ0000PUS>, fell 1 percent.The rocky ride for the U.S. stock market may intensify this week, with earnings reports from JPMorgan Chase <JPM.N>, Merrill Lynch <MER.N>, Citigroup <C.N> and other large banks and financial services companies, as well as reams of economic data.
The jitters in stocks pushed up Japanese government bond futures more than a half point as investors shifted money back into debt. June futures climbed 0.61 point to 139.92 <2JGBv1> after jumping as high as 140.01. The benchmark 10-year yield fell 3.0 basis points to 1.345 percent <JP10YTN=JBTC>.
BUCK UP
The slide in stocks came despite a stronger dollar, normally a signal of improving export markets and a comfort to Asian investors.
The dollar rose on Monday after the G7 nations surprised investors by expressing concern about sharp swings in major currencies, with at least an implied threat that authorities could step in to prop up the dollar through foreign exchange intervention. [
]"Since there was an expression of concern against sharp fluctuations, there is a chance in the near term that the dollar will be bought back, especially against the euro," said Haruhisa Takagi, head of FX spot trading at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.
"But whether there actually will be any joint action is questionable at a time when there is no consistency in the direction of monetary policy in the United States and Europe," Takagi said.
The euro fell as low as $1.5658 <EUR=>, traders said, down from around $1.5810 in late U.S. trading on Friday and pulling away from a record high of $1.5915 hit on electronic trading platform EBS last week. After trimming some of its losses, the euro stood near $1.5720 <EUR=>.
The dollar rose as high as 101.97 yen <JPY=> earlier, up from around 101.00 yen in late New York trade, but later trimmed its gains to stand at 101.25 yen.