HONG KONG (Reuters) - Asian stocks slipped on Tuesday on caution ahead of the earnings season in the United States, while the U.S. dollar weakened against the yen, dragging Japanese exporters down.
Investors were cautious as U.S. financial markets reopen after a holiday and face a slew of key earnings reports due this week from heavyweight stocks, including Bank of America, Citigroup, IBM General Electric and Google.
"Investors need to be careful ahead of earnings reports. It's been the case so far that companies that report results tend to face profit-taking as stocks had gained sharply by already factoring in solid figures," said Yutaka Miura, a senior technical analyst at Mizuho Securities.
The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan eased 0.4 percent, with technology shares the biggest drag by sector.
The Thomson Reuters index of regional shares pulled back 0.3 percent.
Stronger-than-expected results last week from tech bellwether Intel Corp failed to excite investors, while steep loan losses reported by JPMorgan Chase & Co. rattled investors on worries that U.S. consumers are still struggling under the weight of heavy debts.
Japan's benchmark Nikkei average dipped 0.12 percent after dropping 1.2 percent on Monday, pulling back from a 15-month high hit last week. Honda Motor Co was 1.2 percent lower and Toyota Motor Corp slipped 1.1 percent.
An expected bankruptcy filing by Japan Airlines had little market impact, with its shares already having plunged to just 4 yen.
The dollar fell 0.2 percent to 90.51 and hit a four-week low, while the euro fell to a four-month low against the pound as Greece's fiscal woes continued to take a toll on the common currency.
At a meeting of euro zone finance ministers on Monday, Greece received the group's backing to tackle its debt troubles, even as they pressed the country to do more on its own.
Greece's ballooning budget deficit and debt of more than 120 percent of GDP has triggered downgrades by debt rating agencies and hurt the euro in the past few months.
The pound also got a boost from reports that U.S.-based Kraft Foods and Britain's Cadbury Plc were arranging a $19 billion deal to create the world's largest confectionary group.
But the Australian dollar lost ground after China's central bank boosted the yield in an auction of one-year bills more than expected, raising more worries that authorities are trying to slow the country's robust recovery.
Metal and oil prices rose on a weaker dollar.
Palladium hit a fresh 18-month peak, spurred by the launch of an exchange-traded fund backed by the metal earlier this month, while gold inched up $5 to $1,137.50. Oil extended gains scored on Monday, edging up 25 cents a barrel to $78.25.
In the bond market, Japanese government bonds inched down on caution ahead of an auction of five-year debts worth 2.4 trillion yen ($26.4 billion) later in the day. Ten-year JGB futures edged up 0.04 point to 139.32.
(Additional reporting by Aiko Hayashi; Editing by Kazunori Takada)
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