Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks up, euro dips as technicals offset Spain worry

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks up, euro dips as technicals offset Spain worry
Jun 26th 2012, 21:19

Tue Jun 26, 2012 5:19pm EDT

  * Caution sends investors to sidelines before EU summit      * Spanish short-term borrowing costs jump at auction      * U.S. stocks rise, reverse Monday's steep losses      * Euro falls to two-week low vs U.S. dollar          By Richard Leong      NEW YORK, June 26 (Reuters) - Wall Street stocks rose and  the euro fell to its lowest level versus the U.S. dollar in over  two weeks on Tuesday, as technical buying offset a near tripling  in Spanish debt costs on doubts a European summit can ease the  region's debt crisis.      Low expectations for the meeting in Brussels on Thursday and  Friday helped drive Spanish short-term borrowing rates to their  highest in more than six months when the country sold just over  3 billion euros ($3.8 billion) of three- and six-month debt.         In the United States, data pointed to a surprisingly strong  April rise in home prices, boosting U.S. housing shares. The  mildly encouraging figures on housing were mitigated by data  signaling a deterioration in consumer confidence, which stoked  concerns about slowing U.S. growth.       Anxiety over a global economic slowdown underpinned by the  fiscal troubles in the euro zone led analysts to conclude any  bounce in stock prices could be short-lived.      "This is a classic exhaustion rebound. The selling intensity  was pretty high yesterday, and technically, we were due for a  short-term rebound," said James Dailey, portfolio manager of  TEAM Asset Strategy Fund in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.      "But these gains are really unsustainable. I think we have  entered the bear market cycle already, and these (gains) could  disappear any minute."      Investors pared their safe-haven holdings in gold as well as  U.S. and German government debt.      They bought Brent oil futures, which rose above $93 a barrel  on a strike in Norway that threatened North Sea supply,  expectations of falling U.S. crude inventory and rising tension  over Syria.           At the close, the Dow Jones industrial average edged  up 32.47 points, or 0.26 percent, to 12,535.13. The S&P 500  Index gained 6.32 points, or 0.48 percent, to 1,320.04.  The Nasdaq Composite rose 17.90 points, or 0.63 percent,  to 2,854.06.       The FTSEurofirst 300 index of Europe's top shares  closed up 0.02 percent at 986.63 points, wiping out an earlier  0.4 percent rise.       In Tokyo, the Nikkei index finished down 0.8 percent  at 8,663.99.       MSCI's world equity index was up 0.33  percent at 1,192.32, snapping a three-session losing streak.      In the currency market, the euro fell to $1.2440, its  lowest level in more than two weeks against the dollar, before  paring its decline to end down 0.09 percent at $1.2491.       The dollar firmed against other major currencies as the euro  weakened. The dollar index was down 0.16 percent at  82.361, erasing a modest rise.      "The euro is going to trend lower, but I don't think you're  going to see any large moves ahead of the summit," said John  Doyle, senior strategist at Tempus Consulting in Washington.      "I don't think, realistically, that anyone is expecting a  magic bullet to come out of this meeting and to fix all the  underlying problems in Europe."      Spain's formal request on Monday for European aid along with  a downgrade by Moody's of 28 of its banks, plus news that Cyprus  had become the fifth euro zone member to request a bailout,  curbed the appetite for riskier assets.      German Chancellor Angela Merkel was quoted as telling a  meeting of one of the parties in her coalition on Tuesday that  she does not think Europe will have shared total debt liability  in her lifetime.       Finance ministers of the four biggest euro zone economies  were holding last-minute talks in Paris on Tuesday to try to  narrow differences on how to manage the crisis.      The summit will discuss a plan to create a euro zone  treasury which could issue regionally backed bonds as the final  stage of a fiscal union but with a recognition that this may  take years to implement.      In commodity markets, Brent crude oil for August delivery   settled up $2.01 or 2.21 percent at $93.02 a barrel.  U.S. oil futures settled up 15 cents or 0.19 percent at  $78.36 a barrel, extending earlier losses.       Gold fell 0.8 percent at $1,571.34 an ounce while  copper closed up $25 or 0.3 percent at $7,359.15 per tonne  .        In bond trading, benchmark U.S. Treasury notes   were down 9/32 in price at 101-2/32 for a yield of 1.63 percent,  up 3 basis points from Monday's close. German Bund futures   were down 62 basis points or 0.4 percent at 141.53.  
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