US stock futures fall, Asia follows after Canada arrests Huawei CFO

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
TOKYO: US stock futures tumbled on Thursday and Asian markets followed after Canadian authorities arrested a top executive of Chinese tech
giant Huawei Technologies, fanning fears of further tensions between China and the United States. SP500 e-mini futures fell almost 2 per
cent at one point in thin Asian morning trade and were last were down 0.7 per cent. The Canadian Justice Department said Meng Wanzhou,
deputy chair of Huawei, was arrested early this month and that she was sought for extradition by the United States
The arrest heightened the sense of a major collision between the world's two largest economic powers not just over tariffs but also over
technological hegemony. It also came as an inversion in the US yield curve has stoked global investor worries of a possible US
recession. Japan's Nikkei slid 0.8 per cent, with benchmark indexes in South Korea and Australia down 0.6 per cent and 0.2 per cent,
respectively. Currencies were steadier, with major currencies little changed so far. The euro traded flat at $1.1347 while the dollar dipped
0.1 per cent against the yen to 113.01
The yuan is also unmoved at 6.8660 in the offshore trade. US Treasuries futures were also almost flat. The benchmark Treasury 10-year yield
fell to its lowest point since mid-September on Tuesday while the five-year yield dropped below the two-year yield, causing a so-called
inversion in the yield curve. Because an inverted curve has often tended to precede a recession, investors were spooked by that
US markets were closed on Wednesday to mark the death of former President George H.W
Bush.