By Hideyuki Sano
TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian shares struggled on Wednesday after Wall Street snapped a two-day rally with the crisis in Ukraine sapping investor confidence as it threatens a fragile economic recovery in Europe.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> was off 0.04 percent while Japan's Nikkei share average <.N225> gave up 0.1 percent.
Investors were wary as a convoy of 280 Russian trucks carrying humanitarian aid headed for eastern Ukraine, where government forces are closing in on pro-Russian rebels.
While Western officials have voiced suspicions that Russia would use a humanitarian mission as a pretext for invading Ukraine, the Russian Foreign Ministry said it would hand off the convoy to the Red Cross after crossing the border.
"You can't say there's zero chance of a military intervention. But you can't bet on it either. So investors are sort of stuck at the moment." said Ayako Sera, market strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank.
In a further evidence that tit-for-tat sanctions between the West and Russia are putting burden on the European economy, a survey showed German analyst and investor morale plunged in August to its lowest level in more than 1-1/2 years.
Concerns that Europe's largest economy is losing momentum just as the region is barely recovering after the debt crisis hurt German shares, the euro and the European oil prices as well.
German shares fell 1.2 percent <.GDAX> on Tuesday, leading losses in global stock prices, as a growing number of the 6,200 German firms active in Russia are warning that the standoff between Moscow and the West will hit their business.
The euro wallowed at $1.3368
In oil market, European benchmark Brent crude oil fell to a 13-month low of $102.65 per barrel
Appetite for riskier assets have also been undermined by violence in the Middle East, giving a boost to safe-have assets such as bonds.
U.S. bonds slipped slightly on Tuesday, however, as traders sold some bond holdings in advance of a combined $40 billion in longer-dated supply, sending the 10-year yield to 2.456 percent
The Japanese yen, which also tends to rise at times of depressed sentiment because of its wide use as a funding currency, was off last week's high of 101.51 yen to trade at 102.28 yen
The yen hardly budged after data showed Japan's economy shrank an annualised 6.8 percent from the previous quarter - the biggest contraction in three years, but better than market forecast.
While the soft data is unlikely to shake the Bank of Japan's conviction that the economy can ride out the tax hike impact, it could add pressure on the bank for further monetary easing if weakness in exports and consumption is prolonged.
In Asia, the focus is on a series of Chinese economic data due at 0530 GMT (0430 EDT), including industrial production and retail sales for July.
(Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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