Friday, June 8, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, euro slide amid talk of Spain rescue

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, euro slide amid talk of Spain rescue
Jun 8th 2012, 19:03

Fri Jun 8, 2012 3:03pm EDT

  * MSCI world share index down 0.5 pct after three-day rally      * Uncertain central bank policy outlook weighs on oil and  euro      * Spain's bank problems, German economic slowdown in focus        By Wanfeng Zhou           NEW YORK, June 8 (Reuters) - Global stocks, the euro and oil  prices fell on Friday after hopes for more stimulus from central  banks faded and as investors took a cautious stance before a  possible rescue for Spain's troubled banks this weekend.              Wall Street stocks rose as buyers snapped up beaten-down  shares and the S&P 500 headed for its best week of the year.          Senior EU and German officials said deputy finance ministers  of the 17-nation single currency area would hold a conference  call on Saturday morning to discuss Spain's request for an aid  package for its ailing banks, although no figure had been set.                Losses in world shares followed a three-day rally built on  expectations of global coordinated efforts to bolster slackening  economic growth. But investors were disappointed after neither  the European Central Bank nor the U.S. Federal Reserve signaled  near-term action.             "Financial markets are bipolar," said Ward McCarthy, chief  financial economist and managing director, fixed income division  at Jefferies & Co in New York. "Periodic fits of irrational  exuberance are followed by the acknowledgement of reality. That  is why it was risk on earlier this week and risk off today."          MSCI's world equity index was down 0.2  percent at 300.48. The index is still up 2.9 percent on the  week, on pace for its best week since January.        U.S. stocks traded higher, led by defensive shares. The Dow  Jones industrial average was up 62.40 points, or 0.50  percent, at 12,523.36. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index   was up 6.87 points, or 0.52 percent, at 1,321.86. The Nasdaq  Composite Index was up 18.94 points, or 0.67 percent, at  2,849.96.             Top European shares closed 0.2 percent lower.             U.S. President Barack Obama said on Friday that European  leaders face an "urgent need to act" to resolve the region's  financial crisis as the threat of a renewed recession there  spells dangers for an anemic U.S. recovery five months before  elections.                                      The euro fell 0.4 percent to $1.2509, retreating from  a two-week high of $1.2625 hit on Thursday.           More losses would leave the euro vulnerable to a test of the  23-month low of $1.2286 hit on June 1, using Reuters data, after  failing to break above chart resistance at $1.2623, the January  low.          Rating agency Fitch slashed Spain's credit rating on  Thursday, leaving it just two notches short of junk status. It  signaled further downgrades could come as the country tries to  restructure its troubled banking system.              Adding to the bearish sentiment was data showing Italian  industrial production fell far more than expected in April and  German imports tumbled at their fastest rate in two years.            Brent crude for July was down 87 cents to $99.06 a  barrel, after hitting a low of $97.19.                U.S. crude prices fell $1.31 to $83.51 a barrel,  having touched a low of $82.00. Both contracts are down for a  second day.           Copper fell to its lowest since December as investors feared  China's surprise interest-rate cut was a sign of a sharp  slowdown in the world's biggest metals consumer.              The metal, seen as a barometer of global economic health, is  on track to extend its losing streak to a sixth week, its  longest such run in two years.        Spot gold was at $1,592 an ounce, down from $1,589.15  late in New York the previous day.            The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was up 5/32, the  yield at 1.6268 percent.  
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