Thursday, June 21, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks, oil, gold sink on growth worries

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks, oil, gold sink on growth worries
Jun 21st 2012, 20:54

Thu Jun 21, 2012 4:54pm EDT

  * Global stocks drop 2 pct on China, Europe, US data      * Brent ends at lowest in 18 months; US crude ends down 4  pct      * Gold sinks 2.5 pct while dollar rallies      * Goldman Sachs recommends shorting S&P 500          By Caroline Valetkevitch      NEW YORK, June 21 (Reuters) - Global stocks fell 2.0 percent  and Brent crude oil ended at its lowest in 18 months o n T hursday  as data showing Chinese, European and U.S. manufacturing  activity had slowed further underscored worries about weaker  global growth.      The disappointing data came just a day after the Federal  Reserve extended its monetary stimulus program aimed at boosting  the U.S. economy.      U.S. stocks posted their worst day in three weeks, adding to  losses after Goldman Sachs recommended shorting the benchmark  S&P 500 index.       Gold dropped 2.5 percent and nearly wiped out this year's  gains, while the U.S. dollar posted its biggest gain in more  than three months against major currencies. The Fed's move  disappointed foreign exchange investors who had hoped for a more  aggressive policy.      Business activity across the euro zone shrank for a fifth  straight month in June and Chinese manufacturing contracted,  while weaker overseas demand slowed U.S. factory growth, surveys  showed.       The data clouded the outlook for the world economy and  compounded fears that Europe's debt crisis, coupled with slower  growth in the United States and Asia, would hurt economies  worldwide.       "Markets are worried about the slowdown, not only in U.S.  figures but all around the world," said Jeffrey Saut, chief  investment strategist at Raymond James Financial in St.  Petersburg, Florida. "The (stock) market was extremely  overbought coming into this week, and the news gave it an excuse  to sell off."       The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 250.82  points, or 1.96 percent, to end at 12,573.57. The Standard &  Poor's 500 Index was down 30.18 points, or 2.23 percent,  at 1,325.51. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 71.36  points, or 2.44 percent, at 2,859.09.       World stocks, as measured by MSCI's global equity index  , declined 1.8 percent and European shares   ended down 0.5 percent.      On Wednesday, the Fed chose to extend its bond-buying  program, dubbed "Operation Twist," rather than implement more  extensive stimulus, as some had hoped.      The U.S. central bank made its decision after lowering  forecasts for growth and employment in the world's largest  economy in 2012 and 2013. It said it would consider more  stimulus measures if the situation worsened.       In Europe, preliminary manufacturing and service sector data  across the 17-nation euro area showed the downturn in the region  was becoming entrenched as falling new orders and rising  unemployment hit business confidence.       The survey data showed that Germany's private sector shrank  in June for the second consecutive month, with manufacturing  activity hitting a three-year low.      A similar survey of private sector activity in China,  compiled by HSBC, found its factory sector had shrunk for an  eighth straight month in June on weaker demand for exports.      Economic growth in the world's most populous nation is  widely expected to have slowed for a sixth consecutive quarter  in April through June as the country feels the impact of the  euro area debt crisis and property controls weigh on domestic  demand.     In its note, Goldman Sachs cited Thursday's report from the  Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank, whose mid-Atlantic factory  index registered a minus 16.6, an unexpected contraction in the  region's business activity in June.      "We are recommending a short position in the S&P 500 index  with a target of 1,285 (roughly 5 percent below current  levels)," Goldman Sachs analysts said in the note.        Energy and materials shares led declines on the S&P 500,  with the S&P energy sector index down 4 percent and the  materials index down 3.3 percent.       In the oil market, Brent crude tumbled for a fourth  session to end at the lowest level in 18 months. August Brent  crude closed at $89.23 a barrel, dropping $3.46, or 3.7  percent, and posted the lowest settlement for front-month Brent  since Dec. 1, 2010.      NYMEX crude for August delivery closed at $78.20,  down $3.25, or 4 percent, marking the lowest settlement for  front-month U.S. crude since Oct. 4, 2011.            DOLLAR GAINS, GOLD TUMBLES      The dollar index, a measure of the greenback's  performance against a basket of currencies, rose 0.8 percent to  82.241.      Spot gold fell 2.5 percent to $1,566 an ounce, having  earlier hit a low of $1,563.88, within 10 cents of turning  negative for the year, compared with the 2011 close at $1,563.80  on Dec. 30.      "When you see slowdown in China and in the United States and  the debt crisis accelerate in Europe, it leads people to believe  that we will have significant depreciation, especially when  commodities and precious metals prices have been so tied into  the monetary policy," said Jeffrey Sica, chief investment  officer at SICA Wealth Management LLC, which oversees $1 billion  in assets.            SPANISH BOND YIELDS DOWN      Spanish government bond yields fell sharply as Madrid tapped  the markets with a sale of medium-term debt, although at an  increased cost.       Spain sold 2.2 billion euros of two-, three- and five-year  bonds, slightly more than the relatively small stated target  amount, but it relied on its domestic banks to absorb the  issuance.       Ten-year Spanish government bond yields fell  15 basis points to 6.62 percent, having risen to almost 7.30  percent last week.       U.S. bond yields were down as well. Benchmark 10-year  Treasuries were last up 9/32 in price to yield 1.62  percent, down from 1.65 percent late on Wednesday.  
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