By Nigel Stephenson
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices fell to their lowest in five years on Monday, hit by slowing factory activity in China and Europe and hammering emerging market stocks and commodity-linked currencies.
Plunging prices for oil and other commodities raised fears of deflation, especially in the euro zone and Japan, and the prospect of looser monetary policy pushed the yen to a seven-year low against the dollar in Asian trade.
In a further blow to Japan, the Moody's ratings firm cut its credit rating to A1 with a stable outlook from A3, briefly pushing the yen even lower.
Russia's rouble
"Over-optimistic global growth forecasts have been pared back, and probably rightly so, and also China has come back on to the radar. And that of course has become a big driver for a lot of commodity prices," said Neil Williams, chief economist at fund manager Hermes in London.
Chinese purchase manager data showed manufacturing slowed in November, suggesting the world's second biggest economy was still losing momentum. Factory activity also slowed in France and Germany in November.
European shares opened lower. The FTSEurofirst 300 index <.FTEU3> fell 0.6 percent, weighed down by miners and oil stocks.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> fell 2 percent, hitting six-week lows. However, Tokyo's Nikkei stocks index <.N225> hit its highest close for more than seven years as cheap oil lifted airlines.
Emerging market shares tracked by MSCI <.MSCIEF> fell 1.5 percent. The Russian rouble was last down 4.5 percent at 52.65 to the dollar.
Oil prices have been falling for five months as abundant supply outstrips demand. OPEC last week declined to curb output to lift prices. Brent crude
GOLD
Gold fell more than 2 percent at one point to $1,142.90 per ounce
If Swiss voters had approved the proposal in Sunday's referendum, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) would have been forced to more than double its gold reserves, threatening a 1.20 Swiss franc cap against the euro.
The franc, which firmed in the run-up to the vote, dipped to 1.2030 per euro
"The result should of course temporarily relieve the pressure on the SNB's currency floor, albeit whilst doing little or nothing in our opinion to reverse the fundamental downward trajectory of EUR/CHF," said JPMorgan analyst Paul Meggyesi.
The euro was flat at $1.2456
(Additional repporting by Hideyuki Sano and Lisa Twaronite in Tokyo, Ian Chua in Sydney, Anirban Nag and Marc Jones in London; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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