Thursday, May 31, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro hits 2-year low on Spain worries, Aussie weak

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro hits 2-year low on Spain worries, Aussie weak
Jun 1st 2012, 05:04

Fri Jun 1, 2012 1:04am EDT

* Euro hits 2-year low vs dollar

* Aussie hits 8-month low as China's official PMI disappoints

* Yen off highs, market becoming wary of intervention

* Japan finmin Azumi threatens action vs yen rise

By Masayuki Kitano

SINGAPORE, June 1 (Reuters) - The euro hit a two-year low versus the dollar on Friday and could fall further in coming weeks, dogged by worries that Spain may need external aid to shore up its struggling banking sector and fix its public finances.

The euro's sell-off has gained steam this week as Spain's borrowing costs surged on worries it may need to issue more debt to recapitalise its banks, adding stress to markets already frayed by anxiety that Greece may exit the euro zone.

The heightened worries about Spain have been highlighted by a widening in the yield spread between Spanish 10-year government bonds and German Bunds to euro-era highs this week, and the euro has fallen almost in lock step with that move.

The euro slipped 0.2 percent to $1.2348. It fell to as low as $1.2324 on trading platform EBS at one point, its lowest level since July 2010.

"We're looking for $1.18 by the end of Q3, and at this rate, it could happen before that," said Callum Henderson, global head of FX research for Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore.

"During this risk-off environment, the U.S. dollar is the only place to be," he added.

Both the euro and the Australian dollar dipped against the U.S. currency after data provided fresh evidence of a slowdown in China's economy.

The Australian dollar fell 0.4 percent to $0.9686 and touched an eight-month low of $0.9648 after China's official purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 50.4 in May. That was the weakest reading this year and was also below the market's expectations.

Risk aversion on the worries about Europe, coupled with concerns about a slowdown in China -- Australia's main export market -- have weighed on the Australian dollar over the past month.

YEN OFF HIGHS

On Thursday, the euro gained a brief lift after The Wall Street Journal said the International Monetary Fund was discussing a contingency plan for a rescue loan to bail out Spain's third largest bank.

The report, however, was specifically refuted by IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde.

The euro may not get much respite even if Spain gets an international bailout, said Standard Chartered's Henderson.

"If Spain had to be bailed out, the market would instantly focus its attention on Italy. Current European Union and IMF resources cannot fund bailouts of both Spain and Italy," he said.

The euro held steady against the yen at 96.84 yen , staying above an 11-1/2-year low of 96.48 yen struck the previous day.

Weighing on the yen were comments by Japanese Finance Minister Jun Azumi, who said Japan would act decisively against the yen's rise if excessive market moves continue.

The yen's broad surge this week including its rise to a 3-1/2-month high versus the dollar, are making market players wary about the potential for Japanese yen-selling intervention, traders say.

The dollar edged up 0.1 percent to 78.41 yen but still remained close to Thursday's low of 78.21 yen, the dollar's lowest level against the yen since mid-February.

A fall in the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield to a record low this week has cut the yield advantage of Treasuries over Japanese government bonds, and has helped drag the dollar lower against the yen.

Friday also marks the start of direct trading in the Chinese yuan against the yen, a baby step toward raising the yuan's international role.

While banks have previously conducted direct trading in the yuan versus the yen with their customers, the initiative will allow banks to conduct direct yuan/yen trading with each other without having to go through the dollar, market players say.

A risk event later on Friday is U.S. jobs data, although market players say that the market's main focus now is the euro zone's debt crisis.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: U.S. shuttle diplomacy seeks to pull Europe back from brink

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U.S. shuttle diplomacy seeks to pull Europe back from brink
Jun 1st 2012, 03:23

Thu May 31, 2012 11:23pm EDT

* U.S. pressing for plan to recapitalize euro zone banks

* Officials worry messy Greek exit could hit U.S. recovery

* Crisis an unwelcome worry ahead of U.S. election

By Stella Dawson

WASHINGTON, May 31 (Reuters) - The Obama administration is engaged in a fresh round of shuttle diplomacy to nudge European Union leaders into decisive action to prevent Europe's widening crisis from undermining the U.S. and global recoveries.

Officials in Washington believe the U.S. banking system is in sound enough shape, but they know from the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008 and the Asia crisis a decade earlier that financial crises have a nasty habit of delivering massive shocks they cannot anticipate and that ricochet worldwide.

The message to EU politicians from U.S. Treasury and International Monetary Fund officials hopscotching among European capitals and holding meetings in Washington is two-fold: recapitalize your financial system quickly to stabilize banks, and then lay out a clear plan for the political future of monetary union.

The officials fear that a messy Greek exit from the euro zone or a bank run in Spain or Italy could unleash unknown consequences, weakening an already tepid U.S. recovery just months before Obama faces a tight U.S. presidential election.

U.S. officials are tight lipped on specifics of their advice to Europe. But international financial officials and experts in Washington who are in regular contact with the IMF and the U.S. Treasury said there is a sense here that time is running out for Europe.

"They're saying - Whatever you do, fix it, and this time fix it right," said one financial industry official.

This urgency was echoed in Brussels on Thursday when Europe's highest ranking finance officials, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi and European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Olli Rehn, issued blunt warnings that EU politicians must act boldly, or risk collapse of monetary union.

Spain too is pulling no punches. "It's about the future of the euro," Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday.

Spain has become the new focal point of the euro zone debt crisis. Its banks face 1 84 billion euros i n losses and Madrid has botched attempts to shore them up while it struggles to rein in its budget deficit. Markets have taken fright, pushing yields on Spanish government debt ever closer to 7 percent, the level that forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal into EU/IMF bailouts.

Saenz was making the rounds in Washington on Thursday. IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde sent assurances that there were no plans afoot or any Spanish request for IMF financial support. Rather the focus of Saenz's talks appear to be on how to persuade Brussels to inject capital directly into its banks, an issue she said she had discussed with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.

For months, U.S. officials have been telling their European counterparts that recapitalizing banks directly with federal money was an effective strategy it used to stabilize the U.S. banking system in the 2007-2009 financial crisis. The IMF in April called for direct EU capital injections.

Germany has balked at the EU shouldering any more liabilities, aware that as Europe's largest economy, it would foot the bill. But the alternative that U.S. and IMF officials paint, deep recession and monetary collapse, could persuade them otherwise.

CLOCK TICKS

Time is clearly running short.

Money has rushed out of stocks globally and into the safety of U.S. Treasuries, pushing yields this week to historic lows, and the euro currency has tumbled over 7 percent against the dollar in the past month in a flight to safety.

Investors have lost confidence that EU leaders can muster the political will to fix two fatal flaws in monetary union - no centralized banking authority to prevent a bank run and no central fiscal authority to backstop banks or countries.

Without these powers, the message coming from Washington is that a single market and a single currency will remain vulnerable, and that no amount of fiscal austerity, the preferred medicine from Germany, can save monetary union.

"The day of reckoning is arriving," said one Washington insider with deep experience in international finance.

After the G8 summit in Camp David two weeks ago, U.S. President Barack Obama hailed a broad consensus among European leaders around a four-pronged strategy for resolving the European debt crisis.

In perhaps the clearest path laid out publicly to date, he said Europe must recapitalize its banks; adopt a growth strategy to reinvigorate their economies; provide monetary support to help countries like Spain, Italy and Greece implement tough austerity measures; and continue with fiscal discipline.

Since EU leaders returned home, however, there has been little visible progress. A high-profile dinner in Brussels last week to discuss the path forward delivered no tangible results. Meanwhile the banking crisis in Spain has escalated.

No wonder markets have turned volatile, said Hung Tran, deputy managing director of the Institute of International Finance, the lobby for major banks which negotiated the EU/Greek debt restructuring.

"What is needed now is for leaders to agree on basics steps. They need to use the European Stability Mechanism (its new bailout fund) to recapitalize the Spanish banks. If that happens, it could calm market conditions," Tran said.

Obama held a conference call on Wednesday with Germany, France and Italy to follow up on the G8 talks. And U.S. Treasury Under Secretary for International Affairs Lael Brainard is visiting Athens, Frankfurt, Madrid, Berlin and Paris this week in a pre-planned trip to offer U.S. advice on the crisis.

"We are there largely because this is a very active, live debate and people who are navigating their way through an extraordinarily complex range of challenges want us there," Brainard told Reuters in an interview this month.

In Athens, her message was stern. She told Greek parties running in fresh elections on June 17 that Greece faces no choice but to make the difficult economic reforms laid out in its EU/IMF bailout package, or its financing will be cut off, according to political and financial sources in Athens and Washington.

If Greece runs out of money, it would be forced to quit the euro, unleashing huge market uncertainties.

Such a deep crisis might prove the catalyst for Europe to make big political changes needed to save monetary union, Washington insiders say. However, the shockwave would be substantial, and something the White House, Treasury and Federal Reserve would rather avoid.

In a foretaste of what could come, JP Morgan estimated on Thursday that since March alone, Europe's problems have spooked investors to the extent that stocks have fallen six percent, wiping out $1 trillion in U.S. household wealth. This loss of buying power, plus a stronger U.S. dollar, which hurts exports, has shaved roughly half a percentage point from U.S. GDP growth this year, it said.

"If the euro zone continues to unravel, not only will it have serious consequences for the euro zone, but it will have serious and even severe consequences for the entire global economy, including the United States," former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin told the Council on Foreign Relations this week.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: Euro hits fresh 2-year low after China PMI data

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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Euro hits fresh 2-year low after China PMI data
Jun 1st 2012, 01:09

TOKYO, June 1 | Thu May 31, 2012 9:09pm EDT

TOKYO, June 1 (Reuters) - The euro fell to a fresh two-year low of $1.2324 after China's official PMI came in below expectations, sending risk currencies such as the euro and the Aussie lower.

China's official PMI came in at 50.4, dropping from 53.3 in April and falling short of market expectations of 52.2, fanning worries about the slowdown in the Chinese economy.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Euro hits 2-year low on Spain worries, Aussie dips

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Euro hits 2-year low on Spain worries, Aussie dips
Jun 1st 2012, 01:51

Thu May 31, 2012 9:51pm EDT

* Euro hits 2-year low vs dollar

* Aussie slips as China's official PMI disappoints

* Yen off highs, market becoming wary of intervention

* Japan finmin Azumi threatens action vs yen rise

By Masayuki Kitano

SINGAPORE, June 1 (Reuters) - The euro hit a two-year low on Friday and was seen at risk of falling further in coming weeks, dogged by worries that Spain may need external aid to shore up its struggling banking sector and fix its public finances.

The euro's sell-off has gained steam this week as Spain's borrowing costs surged on worries it may need to issue more debt to recapitalise its banks, adding stress to markets frayed by anxiety that Greece may exit the euro zone.

The heightened worries about Spain have been highlighted by a widening in the yield spread between Spanish 10-year government bonds and German Bunds to euro-era highs this week, and the euro has fallen almost in lock step with that move.

The euro slipped 0.2 percent to $1.2337. It fell to as low as $1.2324 on trading platform EBS at one point, its lowest level since July 2010.

"We're looking for $1.18 by the end of Q3, and at this rate, it could happen before that," said Callum Henderson, global head of FX research for Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore.

"During this risk-off environment, the U.S. dollar is the only place to be," he added.

Both the euro and the Australian dollar dipped against the U.S. currency after data provided fresh evidence of a slowdown in China's economy.

The Australian dollar fell 0.5 percent to $0.9673 and touched an eight-month low of $0.9648 at one point after China's official purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 50.4 in May. That was the weakest reading this year and was also below the market's expectations.

Risk aversion on the worries about Europe, coupled with concerns about a slowdown in China -- Australia's main export market -- have weighed on the Australian dollar over the past month.

YEN OFF HIGHS

On Thursday, the euro gained a brief lift after The Wall Street Journal said the International Monetary Fund was discussing a contingency plan for a rescue loan to bail out Spain's third largest bank.

The report, however, was specifically refuted by IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde.

The euro may not get much respite even if Spain gets an international bailout, said Standard Chartered's Henderson.

"If Spain had to be bailed out, the market would instantly focus its attention on Italy. Current European Union and IMF resources cannot fund bailouts of both Spain and Italy," he said.

The euro inched up 0.2 percent against the yen to 96.96 yen , staying above an 11-1/2-year low of 96.48 yen struck the previous day.

Weighing on the yen were comments by Japanese Finance Minister Jun Azumi, who said Japan would act decisively against the yen's rise if excessive market moves continue.

The yen's broad surge this week including its rise to a 3-1/2-month high versus the dollar, are making market players more wary about the potential for Japanese yen-selling intervention, traders say.

The dollar edged up 0.4 percent to 78.60 yen, up from Thursday's low of 78.21 yen, the dollar's lowest level against the yen since mid-February.

A risk event later on Friday is U.S. jobs data, although market players say that the market's main focus now is the euro zone's debt crisis.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares ease, wary before China, U.S. data

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares ease, wary before China, U.S. data
Jun 1st 2012, 00:43

Thu May 31, 2012 8:43pm EDT

* MSCI Asia ex-Japan down 0.1 pct, Nikkei opens down 0.9 pct

* Euro remains pressured, near 23-month low vs dollar

By Chikako Mogi

TOKYO, June 1 (Reuters) - Asian shares eased on Friday, with China's factory activity data and a U.S. jobs report due later in the session making investors cautious as the escalating euro zone debt crisis threatened to further undermine growth worldwide.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.1 percent. It ended May with a 10.9 percent slide, its worst monthly performance in eight months.

Japan's Nikkei opened down 0.9 percent after registering its biggest monthly drop in two years in May.

World stocks also had their largest loss in eight months in May while European shares recorded their worst monthly loss since last August. U.S. shares cut some of Thursday's losses on a report, later denied, of possible International Monetary Fund aid to bail out Spanish banks.

Spanish banking and Greece's fate with the euro bloc were the main focus. But reports showing private employers created fewer jobs than expected and a rise in new unemployment benefit claims raised concerns about the pace of the U.S. recovery.

Economists expected U.S. nonfarm payrolls, due on Friday, to rise by 150,000 jobs in May, up from 115,000 in April, while the unemployment rate likely held steady at 8.1 percent.

A possible further drag on investor risk appetite is China's official Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), due at 0100 GMT. The index likely eased in May, reflecting a slowing pace of output.

The preliminary reading of HSBC's China Manufacturing PMI showed smaller private-sector firms were already struggling, and the final index level for May was due at 0230 GMT.

"Given the heightened uncertainty about the outlook for Europe and the global economy, we recommend staying defensive in FX markets," Barclays Capital analysts said in a note. They suggested positioning for a weaker euro but also trading risky currencies "tactically based on region-specific developments".

As further evidence of global deterioration, data on Thursday showed India's annual economic growth slumped in January-March to a nine-year low of 5.3 percent.

The euro remained pressured, down 0.1 percent at $1.2357 on Friday, and hovering near its 23-month low against the dollar of $1.23363 hit on Thursday. The euro fell to an 11-1/2-year low against the yen at 96.48 on Thursday.

The yen eased against the dollar to 78.50 yen on Friday after rising to a 3-1/2 month high of 78.21 yen the day before on strong bids for safety.

The flight to safety lifted the dollar index, measured against a basket of major currencies, to a 21-month high of 83.215 on Thursday, helping to push the Thomson Reuters-Jefferies CRB index, a global benchmark for commodities, to its lowest level since September 2010 on Thursday.

U.S. benchmark 10-year Treasury yields on Thursday fell as low as 1.53 percent - the lowest on record going back more than two centuries, according to Reuters data.

The cost of insuring against a Spanish default hit 600 basis points for the first time on Thursday and the country's 10-year debt yield remained at well above 6 percent.

Asian credit markets were subdued early on Friday, with the spread on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment-grade index barely changed.

U.S. crude was steady around $86.55 a barrel on Friday after settling at the lowest close since Oct. 20. With a 17.5 percent loss for May, U.S. crude futures marked their biggest monthly decline since December 2008.

Brent crude futures eased 0.2 percent at $101.66 on Friday after settling at its lowest finish since early October.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: Japan ready to act on yen, intervention not ruled out-MOF's Nakao

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Japan ready to act on yen, intervention not ruled out-MOF's Nakao
Jun 1st 2012, 00:48

TOKYO, June 1 | Thu May 31, 2012 8:48pm EDT

TOKYO, June 1 (Reuters) - Japan may have difference in views on exchange-rates with its U.S. and European counterparts but is determined to take action in currency markets if excessive yen rises continue, the country's top financial diplomat said on Friday, signalling Tokyo's readiness to intervene in the market if necessary.

"It's becoming more obvious that (we are seeing) yen appreciation led by speculative movements, based on concerns over European issues and its banking issues," Takehiko Nakao, vice finance minister for international affairs, said in a speech at a forum.

He said that intervention should not be ruled out.

"We continue to monitor currency movements and if this kind of excessive move continues, not just versus the euro but versus the dollar, we will respond decisively," he said.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: European leaders should ready big steps - Zoellick

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European leaders should ready big steps - Zoellick
Jun 1st 2012, 00:27

By Yeganeh Torbati

LONDON, June 1 | Thu May 31, 2012 8:27pm EDT

LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) - European leaders must be ready to recapitalise banks in the event of a Greek exit from the euro zone currency bloc and assure funding for Spain to prevent an economic collapse, World Bank President Robert Zoellick said on Friday.

Greek elections scheduled for this month could hasten the country's departure from the euro zone, should parties that wish to scrap the country's bailout programme prevail.

If Greece withdraws from the euro and European leaders do not act decisively to prop up banks, Zoellick wrote in a column in the Financial Times, the resulting crisis could push the continent into a "danger zone."

"Eurozone leaders need to be prepared - psychologically and through the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) - to recapitalise banks," Zoellick wrote. "In the eurozone, the guarantees of some national sovereigns are unlikely to be sufficient and only that of the 'euro-sovereign' will suffice."

Zoellick, whose five-year term at the head of the World Bank ends on June 30, added: "It is far from clear that eurozone leaders have steeled themselves for this step."

On Thursday, the European Commission said there is no possibility for euro zone banks to be directly recapitalised using the ESM, although that statement appeared to contradict a document released on Wednesday from the commission.

But simply providing liquidity to banks is not enough, Zoellick wrote.

Leaders must also ensure that banks in turn lend that money out to prevent the corporate sector from seizing up as they did after collapse of US investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008.

"And if banks get emergency assistance, bank executives will need to be pressed to keep providing customers with cash," Zoellick said.

In the medium term, euro zone leaders should agree on funding assurance for countries such as Spain, either through the ESM or euro zone bonds, Zoellick said. Such a move, he argued, would be in line with calls from Germany for troubled states to reduce their deficits.

The head of the International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde denied a news report on Thursday that the IMF was preparing assistance to Spain, saying the fund had received no requests for financial support from the country.

Spain's troubles mounted this week, after it revealed that its highly indebted regions faced 36 billion euros of debt refinancing bills this year, far more than the previously stated 8 billion.

Spaniards, worried by the state of their banks, moved record amounts of money abroad, official figures showed.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: Argentina dollar deposits dip on crackdown-sources

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Argentina dollar deposits dip on crackdown-sources
May 31st 2012, 22:58

Thu May 31, 2012 6:58pm EDT

* Gov't controls on dollar-buying rattle savers, companies

* Investors fear further curbs on currency transfers abroad

* Sources estimate $1.3 billion in withdrawals since May 11

By Jorge Otaola and Walter Bianchi

BUENOS AIRES, May 31 (Reuters) - Argentine banks have lost about 10 percent of their dollar deposits in less than three weeks from fears over fresh government controls on foreign currency purchases, four banking sources said.

President Cristina Fernandez imposed restrictions on dollar purchases late last year after surging demand for greenbacks forced the central bank to spend several billion dollars in foreign reserves to prop up the peso.

Savers and companies started drawing money out of dollar-denominated bank accounts earlier this month when the AFIP tax agency charged with controlling foreign-currency purchases cracked down on buying at the official rate , the sources said.

"The withdrawal (of dollar deposits) is unhurried but steady," one banker said on condition of anonymity.

Four banking sector sources estimated the amount taken out of bank accounts since May 11 at $1.3 billion, roughly 10 percent of the total.

Central Bank data showed total dollar deposits of $12.45 billion on May 18, down from $13.14 billion on May 4 - before the tax agency intensified its crackdown.

A spokesman at the monetary authority declined to comment on the dollar withdrawals, which is a sensitive subject in Argentina 10 years after a sharp economic crisis caused the banking sector to collapse.

Argentines tend to save in greenbacks and often withdraw them from the bank at times of heightened political uncertainty in Latin America's No. 3 economy, where memories of the deposit limits and sharp devaluation of the crisis remain fresh.

CENTRAL BANK RESERVES

Former Deputy Economy Minister Jorge Todesca said banks could potentially withstand the withdrawal of all dollar deposits.

"The system can stand it because these deposits have very high reserve requirements and the Central Bank has got the reserves," he said.

The Central Bank's reserves, which Fernandez's administration plans to tap again this year to meet debt repayments, stood at just over $47 billion through Thursday.

Some investors are concerned the government could start to curb overseas transfers of coupon payments on sovereign bonds as it battles to keep dollars in the country.

Yields on Argentina's Boden 2012 bond, on which the government is due to pay a $2.3 billion coupon in August, rose to more than 19 percent on Wednesday.

Under the controls imposed late last year, the AFIP agency gives prior approval for all foreign currency purchases in the formal market, either granting or refusing requests on the basis of income or any tax irregularities.

Traders say even tougher limits on purchases this month have smothered trade in the formal market, driving some jittery savers to pay a much higher price for safe-haven dollars in the black market - dominated by off-the-books deals by foreign exchange houses and measured by Reuters.

Last week, the peso fell to a record low of 6.40 per dollar. It has since firmed and closed at 5.92 per dollar on Thursday.

The local currency has also weakened sharply in the so-called blue-chip swap market, which reflects the implied exchange rate used to buy Argentine shares or bonds that can be sold for dollars overseas.

In that market, the peso ended at a record low of 6.40 per dollar on Thursday. That compares with the official, interbank rate of 4.4725 per dollar.

Soon after Fernandez put the measures on the dollar in place, foreign-currency deposits fell 17 percent though they stabilized in subsequent months.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: TABLE-Foreign brokers set to buy Japanese stocks

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TABLE-Foreign brokers set to buy Japanese stocks
May 31st 2012, 23:11

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks weakest in 8 mos; US bond yields hit lows

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks weakest in 8 mos; US bond yields hit lows
May 31st 2012, 21:22

Thu May 31, 2012 5:22pm EDT

* S&P 500 and euro post sharpest monthly loss since Sept

* Oil prices down 16 pct for May, worst since Dec 2008

* U.S. Treasury yields hit fresh 60-year lows

By Barani Krishnan

NEW YORK, May 31 (Reuters) - Stocks ended May with their largest loss in eight months and commodities also took a battering after a spate of worrying U.S. economic data on Thu rsday hit markets already reeling from Europe's debt troubles.

The euro had its worst performance since September too, repeatedly hitting a near two-year bottom.

U.S. bond yields fell to record lows as fears about Spain's troubled banks and Greece's possible exit from the euro zone spurred a global race for safe assets.

Many investors braced for another round of risk aversion on Friday should the monthly jobs report from the U.S. government contain weaker numbers than preliminary data issued by a payrolls processor on Thursday.

"Europe is the main issue, no question about it, but you have a supporting cast from the U.S. data," said Paul Zemsky, head of asset allocation at ING Investment Management in New York.

Spain remained the focal point of traders on growing speculation that Madrid would sooner or later ask for outside help to bail out its banks. Wall Street pared some of the day's losses on a report -- later denied -- of possible International Monetary Fund aid. But the European Commission has offered direct aid for a euro zone rescue fund to recapitalize distressed Spanish banks and more time for Spain to reduce its budget deficit.

Markets got an inkling of what was to come in Friday's U.S. jobs report after payrolls processor ADP said private employers created 133,000 jobs in May, fewer than the expected 148,000. New claims for unemployment benefits rose by 10,000 for the fourth straight weekly increase, the Labor Department reported.

Investors were dismayed by another report on economic growth and manufacturing in the U.S. Midwest that pointed to a slowdown.

At the close, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 26.41 points, or 0.21 percent, at 12,393.45. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index lost 2.99 points, or 0.23 percent, at 1,310.33. The Nasdaq Composite Index fell 10.02 points, or 0.35 percent, to 2,827.34.

For the month, the S&P 500 was down 6 percent -- its sharpest loss since September.

European stocks closed down 7 percent for May and global equities tumbled 10 percent -- also marking their worst showing since September.

Commodities fell even more, with crude oil futures plunging 15 percent for the month both in London and New York for their biggest loss since December 2008. Copper lost 11 percent for the month.

"There's a lot of instability in the world, and along with the weak economic signals there's going to be significant volatility that I don't expect to end anytime soon," said Don Steinbrugge, managing partner of Agecroft Partners in Richmond, Virginia.

The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note rose 12/32 in price, its yield at 1.578 percent -- down from Wednesday's 1.6 percent levels, which already marked a 60-year bottom.

NO ECB HELP

In Europe, ECB President Mario Draghi ruled out hopes that the central bank would step in to ease the pressure in financial markets as EU leaders grappled with measures to tackle structural problems in the debt crisis.

"Can the ECB fill the vacuum of lack of action by national governments on fiscal growth? The answer is 'No,'" Draghi told the European Parliament. "Can the ECB fill the vacuum of the lack of action by national governments on the structural problem? The answer is 'No.'"

Concerns over Europe's debt crisis and the lack of a clear policy response have been rising since Spain unveiled unconvincing plans to recapitalize nationalized lender Bankia , raising the possibility it could need outside help.

Those worries kept Spain's 10-year bond yields at around 6.6 percent, not far from Wednesday's euro-era high of 6.79 percent and close to the crucial 7 percent mark, which has led to troubled nations like Portugal and Ireland needing bailouts.

The euro was last at $1.2358 to the dollar, after setting a 23-month low at $1.2335. The single currency was flat on the day and down nearly 7 percent on the month.

The flight from Spanish debt and Italian bonds, which are under threat of contagion from Spain, has boosted demand for the safety offered by German government paper.

Germany's two-year bonds traded just above zero percent on Thursday, while benchmark 10-year Bund yields hovered around their record low of about 1.25 percent.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-European fiscal woes sink euro against dollar, yen

Reuters: US Dollar Report
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
FOREX-European fiscal woes sink euro against dollar, yen
May 31st 2012, 21:00

Thu May 31, 2012 5:00pm EDT

  * Euro hits milestone lows against US dollar and yen      * IMF refutes news report it is working on Spain contingency  plan      * Weak U.S. data raise worries about Friday's jobs report        By Daniel Bases           NEW YORK, May 31 (Reuters) - The euro weakened on Thursday  against the U.S. dollar in a volatile session punctuated by  concerns over Spain's banking sector and disappointing U.S.  economic data that at one point sent the common currency to a  fresh 23-month low.           The euro also hit an 11-1/2-year low against the rallying  Japanese yen.         A report by The Wall Street Journal that said the  International Monetary Fund was discussing a contingency plan  for a rescue loan to bail out Spain's third largest bank sent a  jolt of buying into the euro and briefly lifted it into positive  territory against the greenback.              The report was specifically refuted by IMF Managing Director  Christine Lagarde.            "There is no such plan. We have not received any request to  that effect, and we are not doing any work in relation to any  financial support," said Lagarde after a meeting with Spanish  Vice President Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría.          Spanish bond yields remained near record highs on fears  Spain would eventually have to ask for a bailout. The European  Commission's top economic official, Olli Rehn, warned that the  single currency area could disintegrate without stronger  crisis-fighting mechanisms and tough fiscal discipline.       "The market took the euro up 35 pips on that report, but it  didn't last long and just as quickly as it rose it came right  back down," said Joe DeGeronimo, chief dealer at SMBC in New      York.         One positive factor that seemed to work for the euro was the  expectation that Ireland would vote in favor of Europe's new  fiscal pact, but investors quickly sold into rallies.         Ireland began casting ballots in the only popular vote on  Europe's new fiscal treaty on Thursday, with opinion polls  pointing to a 'yes' vote that could ease concerns about its  funding prospects.            Prior to the Dow Jones report, which sparked a brief rally  to a session high $1.2428, the euro was trading at a near  two-year low of $1.2335. It has since settled down to trade off  0.11 percent at $1.2357.              The euro fell to 96.48 yen, its worst level  against the Japanese currency since December 2000. It traded off  0.91 percent at 96.84 in afternoon activity, while the U.S.  dollar lost 0.91 percent to trade at a 3-1/2 month low of 78.37  yen. Japan's currency has benefited from safe-haven flows given  Europe's troubles and the weak U.S. economic data.            The euro zone common currency was on track for a loss of 6.7  percent in May against the U.S. dollar, the worst monthly  performance since September 2011. Against the yen, the euro is  on track for an 8.3-percent drop, its worst performance in  exactly two years. The dollar is poised for a monthly loss of  1.8 percent against the yen.          Sterling, after dropping to a four-month nadir of $1.5359  , is on track to lose about 5 percent against the  greenback.                              U.S. JOBS REPORT AHEAD            A slew of bearish U.S. data on the labor market,  first-quarter economic growth and manufacturing in the U.S.  Midwest all pointed to a slowdown in the recovery. Private  employers, according to ADP data, created fewer jobs than  expected, and new claims for benefits rose, suggesting a modest  labor market recovery was stalling.           "If we get through the New York day without too much damage  in the markets, like stocks, I think it will be a quiet  overnight until tomorrow's jobs report. Truly strong jobs and  manufacturing reports are going to give the dollar a boost," he  said.         Economists polled by Reuters expect U.S. May nonfarm  payrolls to have risen by 150,000 jobs, up from 115,000 in  April.        "I think the fear is for a much weaker number. If we get a  number below 100,000, that would probably sustain the negative  momentum," said Vassili Serebriakov, currency strategist at  Wells Fargo in New York.              "I'm not sure if it would necessarily accelerate it. But a  number below 100,000 would be seen as the most significant sign  of the U.S. economy slowing."         The bearish U.S. data and Europe's festering fiscal woes  pushed benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields to record lows of  1.5326, according to Tradeweb.        The greenback was also the beneficiary of safe-haven flows.  Against a basket of currencies it rose to its strongest level in  21 months, reaching 83.215 before slipping back to 83.083, up  0.082 percent on the day.             The index looks closed above its 100-month average, at  81.823, for the first time in almost 10 years. A break of the  100-month average has been a good indicator of a long-term trend  change, having produced four successful signals in the past 30  years.  
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Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ slides to 5-month low; bond yields drop

Reuters: US Dollar Report
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
CANADA FX DEBT-C$ slides to 5-month low; bond yields drop
May 31st 2012, 20:28

Thu May 31, 2012 4:28pm EDT

  * C$ hits 2012 low of C$1.0366 vs US$, or 96.47 U.S. cents      * Currency ends at C$1.0329, or 96.81 U.S. cents      * Soft U.S. data, euro zone fears weigh      * Canadian 10-, 30-year bond yields at record lows        By Jennifer Kwan          TORONTO, May 31 (Reuters) - Canada's dollar slumped to a  five-month trough against the U.S. dollar on Thursday and  longer-term bond yields hit record lows as investors shunned  riskier trades on signs of soft U.S. growth and worries about  Spain's debt troubles.        The Canadian currency touched C$1.0366 against its  U.S. counterpart, or 96.47 U.S. cents, its weakest since Dec.  20.           The commodity-linked currency weakened after U.S. data  suggested the labor market recovery there was stalling after a  strong performance early in the year. Data showed private  payroll growth accelerated only a tad last month, while claims  for jobless benefits rose last week.          The data comes ahead of Friday's key U.S. payrolls report.        Markets were also disappointed by data that showed U.S.  first-quarter growth was revised down and Midwest business  activity slowed considerably.         Overseas, worries about Spain's banks and Greece's survival  in the euro area pushed the euro to a two-year low  against the dollar.           Meanwhile, the S&P 500 and S&P/TSX composite index   both fell and notched their worst month since September.                David Bradley, director of foreign exchange trading at  Scotiabank, said recent weakness in equities fueled investor  appetite for greenbacks.              "The buying interest is a function of the fact that the  equity markets came off so much this month so for rebalancing  purposes a lot of funds buy U.S. dollars," he said.           "It's month-end flows for sure and general U.S. dollar  strength across the board. The dollar is a safe haven these days  with all the trouble in Europe."              The Canadian dollar ended at C$1.0329 against its U.S.  counterpart, or 96.81 U.S. cents, down from Wednesday's North  American session close at C$1.0292 against the U.S. dollar, or  97.16 U.S. cents. For the month, the currency shed around 4  percent, according to Thomson Reuters data.           "Risk sentiment just continues to plunge by the day," said  Mazen Issa, Canada macro strategist at TD Securities. "Things  were holding in fairly steady until equities opened and you saw  the Canadian dollar just drop."       Issa sees the Canadian dollar weakening beyond C$1.04 should  Friday's Canadian GDP data and U.S. nonfarm payroll report  dismay markets. In the near term he said the currency should  hover between C$1.03 and C$1.04 versus the greenback.         Headlines out of Europe on Thursday did not help broader  confidence. The Canadian dollar underperformed most of its G10  currency peers including the Australian and New Zealand dollars.              On Wednesday, the Canadian dollar had firmed to a 2012 high  of C$1.2721 against the euro.         Canadian government bond prices edged higher across the  curve, sending longer-dated yields to record lows. Canada's  benchmark 10-year bond yield hit a record trough of  1.711 percent, while the 30-year yield touched a  record low of 2.276 percent.  
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Reuters: US Dollar Report: FX swaps with foreign central banks $10.568 bln-NY Fed

Reuters: US Dollar Report
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
FX swaps with foreign central banks $10.568 bln-NY Fed
May 31st 2012, 20:30

NEW YORK | Thu May 31, 2012 4:30pm EDT

NEW YORK May 31 (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve provided $10.568 billion in liquidity to foreign central banks in the latest week via its swap lines, the largest since February.

The European Central Bank was the only central bank to tap the swap facility, the New York Federal Reserve said on Thursday, which included $10.268 billion in liquidity at 84 days and 0.66 percent and $300 million at seven days at the same interest rate.

The Federal Reserve has established swap arrangements with the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Japan in an effort to respond to the reemergence of strains in short-term funding markets in Europe.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-European fiscal woes sink euro against dollar, yen

Reuters: US Dollar Report
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
FOREX-European fiscal woes sink euro against dollar, yen
May 31st 2012, 19:22

Thu May 31, 2012 3:22pm EDT

  * Euro hits milestone lows against US dollar and yen      * Discounted report on IMF plans for Spain gave euro brief  relief      * Weak U.S. data raise worries about Friday's jobs report        By Daniel Bases           NEW YORK, May 31 (Reuters) - The euro weakened on Thursday  against the U.S. dollar in a volatile session punctuated by  concerns over Spain's banking sector and disappointing U.S.  economic data that at one point sent the common currency to a  fresh 23-month low.           The euro also hit an 11-1/2-year low against the rallying  Japanese yen.         A report by Dow Jones that said the International Monetary  Fund was discussing a contingency plan for a rescue loan to bail  out Spain's third largest bank sent a jolt of buying into the  euro and briefly lifted it into positive territory against the  greenback. The IMF said later, however, it is constantly  discusses "different scenarios" in its member countries.              In an earlier briefing an IMF spokesman told reporters the  fund was not drawing up financial assistance plans for Spain,  nor had Madrid requested any funding.         Spanish bond yields remained near record highs on fears  Spain would eventually have to ask for a bailout. The European  Commission's top economic official, Olli Rehn, warned that the  single currency area could disintegrate without stronger  crisis-fighting mechanisms and tough fiscal discipline.       "The market took the euro up 35 pips on that report, but it  didn't last long and just as quickly as it rose it came right  back down," said Joe DeGeronimo, chief dealer at SMBC in New      York.         One positive factor that seemed to work for the euro was the  expectation that Ireland would vote in favor of Europe's new  fiscal pact, but investors quickly sold into rallies.         Ireland began casting ballots in the only popular vote on  Europe's new fiscal treaty on Thursday, with opinion polls  pointing to a 'yes' vote that could ease concerns about its  funding prospects.            Prior to the Dow Jones report, which sparked a brief rally  to a session high $1.2428, the euro was trading at a near  two-year low of $1.2335. It has since settled down to trade off  0.02 percent at $1.2367.              The euro fell to 96.48 yen, its worst level  against the Japanese currency since December 2000. It traded off  0.95 percent at 96.87 in afternoon activity, while the U.S.  dollar lost 1 percent to trade at a 3-1/2 month low of 78.31  yen. Japan's currency has benefited from safe-haven flows fiven  Europe's troubles and the weak U.S. economic data.            The euro zone common currency was on track for a loss of 6.6  percent in May against the U.S. dollar, the worst monthly  performance since September 2011. Against the yen, the euro is  on track for an 8.3-percent drop, its worst performance in  exactly two years. The dollar is poised for a monthly loss of  1.8 percent against the yen.          Sterling, after dropping to a four-month nadir of $1.5359  , is on track to lose about 5 percent against the  greenback.                              U.S. JOBS REPORT AHEAD            A slew of bearish U.S. data on the labor market,  first-quarter economic growth and manufacturing in the U.S.  Midwest all pointed to a slowdown in the recovery. Private  employers, according to ADP data, created fewer jobs than  expected, and new claims for benefits rose, suggesting a modest  labor market recovery was stalling.           "If we get through the New York day without too much damage  in the markets, like stocks, I think it will be a quiet  overnight until tomorrow's jobs report. Truly strong jobs and  manufacturing reports are going to give the dollar a boost," he  said.         Economists polled by Reuters expect U.S. May nonfarm  payrolls to have risen by 150,000 jobs, up from 115,000 in  April.        "I think the fear is for a much weaker number. If we get a  number below 100,000, that would probably sustain the negative  momentum," said Vassili Serebriakov, currency strategist at  Wells Fargo in New York.              "I'm not sure if it would necessarily accelerate it. But a  number below 100,000 would be seen as the most significant sign  of the U.S. economy slowing."         The bearish U.S. data and Europe's festering fiscal woes  pushed benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields to record lows of  1.5326, according to Tradeweb.        The greenback was also the beneficiary of safe-haven flows.  Against a basket of currencies it rose to its strongest level in  21 months, reaching 83.215 before slipping back to 83.007, just  slightly negative on the day.         However, the index looks set to close above its 100-month  average, at 81.823, for the first time in almost 10 years.            A break of the 100-month average has been a good indicator  of a long-term trend change, having produced four successful  signals in the past 30 years.  
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