* Asian shares slump on concern about global economy
* Hedge funds seen booking profits on risky assets
* Yen supported by flight to safer assets
By Susan Fenton
HONG KONG, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Asian shares fell sharply on Thursday after weak U.S. economic data rekindled investor worries about growth, while hedge funds sold risky assets, lifting the yen and supporting the dollar.
European stock index futures
Asian investors were unnerved by a surprise drop in U.S. home sales last month, which followed a decline in consumer confidence, highlighting risks to a recovery in the world's biggest economy.
The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks traded outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> slid 2.4 percent while the Thomson Reuters index of regional shares <.TRXFLDAXPU> was down 1.4 percent, marking a third session of losses.
"Everybody's been calling for a correction but I think the speed and volume of what we're seeing has caught the market by surprise," said Ben Potter, a research analyst at IG Markets in Australia, where shares tumbled 2.4 percent.
"There has been a big change in underlying sentiment which has triggered faint alarm bells."
High-yielding Australian and New Zealand currencies fell to
three-week lows and Indonesia's central bank was seen in the
market for a second day to support the rupiah
Currency traders said hedge funds, whose flight from risky assets had aggravated a sell-off in Latin American markets on Wednesday, were seen taking profits on Asian investments ahead of their business year-end in November.
Short-term speculators were also pocketing gains. However, losses were restrained compared with Wednesday's 5 percent slump in the MSCI's Latin American stock index <.MILA00000PUS>.
The New Zealand dollar
ANZ CAUTIOUS
The yen's strength added pressure on shares of exporters in Japan, driving the Nikkei index <.N225> down 1.8 percent and below the 10,000 points mark for the first time in three weeks.
The yen rose to as high as 90.25 to the dollar from 90.78 on Wednesday, when it gained more than 1 percent, while the dollar was steady against a basket of currencies <.DXY> near its highest in more than two weeks.
Foreign investors were pulling out of South Korea's stock market, which saw the biggest net selling by foreigners this year as the benchmark KOSPI index <.KS11> fell 1.5 percent.
Asian stocks have been among the strongest performers this year though and each pullback has been taken as buying opportunity to play the Asia growth story.
Disappointing U.S. home sales data on Wednesday overshadowed news that U.S. durable goods orders rose for the second time in three months and raised fears that U.S. third-quarter gross domestic product, due out later on Thursday, would fall short of forecasts for 3.3 percent annualised growth.
Receding rate rise expectations in New Zealand heaped
pressure on the Kiwi dollar
While Norway followed Australia and raised interest rates on Wednesday as its economy recovers from the global downturn, New Zealand central bank governor Alan Bollard was notably cautious about the global outlook on Thursday.
"There remain significant vulnerabilities and challenges to be worked through in many economies," Bollard said in a statement. "This process could weigh on global growth going forward."
Australian banks have also been surprisingly cautious this week, despite being far less affected by the crisis than their U.S. and European peers.
Mike Smith, chief executive of Australia and New Zealand
Banking Group
"This isn't over yet," Smith said. "Often it's the aftershocks that do the most damage."
The bank reported a strong recovery in second-half profits but its cautious outlook helped its shares lose 2 percent.
Resources stocks were hit by falling commodity prices with
Australian mining giant Rio Tinto
Australian bond futures rallied on safe-haven inflows and
as investors pared bets for a sharp rate rise next week.
Three-year bond futures
The oil price
In Hong Kong, shares in PetroChina <0857.HK> slid 4.8 percent by lunchtime after disappointing third-quarter results from the world's second-most valuable oil and gas producer.
Japan Airlines <9205.T> bucked the slide in Japanese shares, rising 2.7 percent ahead of an announcement by the government on a plan to restructure the struggling carrier. [ID:nT349661]
Japanese electronics giant NEC Electronics Corp <6723.T> tumbled 8.3 percent after reporting on Wednesday a far bigger quarterly loss than a year ago. (Additional reporting by Adrian Bathgate in WELLINGTON; Editing by Jan Dahinten)