Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares slide on Japan data as Greek meetings loom

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares slide on Japan data as Greek meetings loom
Aug 22nd 2012, 07:23

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Wed Aug 22, 2012 3:23am EDT

  * European shares open down 0.8 percent      * Euro holds ground near seven-week high vs dollar      * Japan July exports slump most in six months      * Greek meetings, Fed minutes eyed        LONDON, Aug 22 (Reuters) - European shares slipped from  13-month highs on Wednesday as investors weighed up whether  signs of progress in the euro zone debt crisis warranted the  recent surge and as Japan provided a reminder of the slump  blighting top economies.      The uncertainty over Europe's debt woes have left many major  economies stuttering, but many big stock markets have risen  15-20 percent since June on expectations of central bank action  to address the crisis.      After falls in Asia on the back of a plunge in Japanese  export numbers, top European shares opened down 0.8 percent,  with London's FTSE 100, Paris's CAC-40 and  Frankfurt's DAX all in negative territory.         Europe's battle to overcome its debt problems remains the  central focus for many global investors, and the next few days  will kick off a string of meetings that could go a long way in  shaping the future course of the crisis.      Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras meets with head of the  Eurogroup of euro zone finance ministers, Jean-Claude Juncker,  in Athens late in the afternoon before travelling to Berlin on  Thursday to see German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French  President François Hollande.       "The recent rally in share prices has not at all been based  on the outlook for earnings - in fact completely the opposite.  It has been entirely built on hopes of large scale ECB  intervention in euro zone periphery bond markets," said Tammo  Greetfeld, equity strategist at UniCredit in Munich.      "We are at the start of a multi-week period of key political  events such as the Greek meetings, the ECB meeting on September  6 and the German court decision on the ESM the week after."      "We think the outcome of these factors, in combination with  the negative earning revisions means the current rally will not  last and that equities markets will decline," he added.      Hopes surrounding a new bond buying plan being drawn up by  the ECB helped lift the euro to a seven-week high against the  dollar late on Tuesday. It held on to much of those gains in  early European trading to stand at $1.2456.      Bond markets took their cue from nervous equities, with  German government bonds back in demand at the  expense of their Italian and Portuguese counterparts.      Germany will sell 5 billion euros of bonds later and is  again expected to pay nothing to borrow the money as the euro  zone's debt worries and fears the bloc could split leave  investors clambering for ultra-safe German assets.      Later in the day the U.S. Federal Reserve will publish the  minutes of its most recent meeting, which will be scoured for  clues on whether the central bank is gearing up for more policy  aid.  
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