BANGKOK — Shares fell Thursday in most Asian markets ahead of a key U.S. inflation report due Friday that might point the way ahead for interest rates.
Benchmarks fell more than 1% in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Sydney. Oil prices and U.S. futures also declined.
The markets' big focus this week is on a U.S. government inflation report due Friday. The personal consumption expenditures index, or PCE, is the Federal Reserve's preferred measure of inflation, and analysts said investors were in a wait-and-see posture after recent mixed data.
The latest updates on inflation could influence the central bank's decision on when to begin cutting interest rates, which remain at their highest level in more than 20 years and which are having an impact worldwide.
In Asian trading, another set of measures to boost the Chinese property market failed to lift market sentiment. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 1.9% to 17,746.53, while the Shanghai composite index was down 0.5%.
The latest move was by Beijing, one of China's biggest cities, when China's capital cut minimum down-payment ratios and mortgage interest rates, beginning Thursday.
Other Chinese cities have taken similar measures in line with national policies aimed at enticing buyers back into a market that has languished since the government cracked down on excessive borrowing by property developers, causing dozens of such companies to default on their debts. The downturn has dragged on the entire economy, the world's second largest.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 index was down 1% at 39,286.97 amid concern over further weakness in the Japanese yen.