Sunday, August 26, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares steady, mark time before Jackson Hole

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares steady, mark time before Jackson Hole
Aug 27th 2012, 00:32

Sun Aug 26, 2012 8:32pm EDT

  * MSCI Asia ex-Japan off 0.1 pct, dragged down by Seoul  shares      * Nikkei opens up 0.8 pct      * No major Asia data, focus remains on Europe, U.S.        By Chikako Mogi      TOKYO, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Asian shares steadied on Monday on  a fresh report detailing a potential framework for the European  Central Bank's new bond buying scheme, to calm borrowing costs  of stricken euro zone states, and hopes of a strong easing from  the Federal Reserve.          Central bank sources told Reuters on Friday that the ECB is  considering setting yield band targets under the bond-buying  programme to shield its strategy from speculators, but the  decision would not be made before its Sept. 6 policy meeting.         Global stocks rose while the euro bounced off lows against  the dollar on Friday on the report.      There is a dearth of major economic data in Asia on Monday,  meaning the market's focus in the short-term will remain fixed  on Europe, with longer-term focus on the annual U.S. Jackson  Hole meeting of central bankers and economists in September.      MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   was down 0.1 percent, dragged lower by a 0.4  percent decline in Seoul shares, where heavyweight  Samsung Electronics slid 7 percent after a U.S. jury  found Samsung had copied critical features of Apple.      Japan's Nikkei stock average opened up 0.8 percent.            A letter sent from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to a U.S. House  panel reinforced market persistent views that the Fed would soon  implement a third round of quantitative easing, known as QE3.      In the letter, obtained by Reuters on Friday, Bernanke  wrote: "There is scope for further action by the Fed to ease  financial conditions."          Traders will be seeking clues from Bernanke when he delivers  a speech at a central bankers and economists meeting in Jackson  Hole, Wyoming, Sept. 12-13. Bernanke has used the event the  previous two years to flag the Fed's intention on more easing.        Bernanke is due to speak on Friday and ECB President Mario  Draghi will take the podium on Saturday.      "We expect Bernanke to clearly signal that Q3 is in the  pipeline and our expectation remains that this will be delivered  at the 12-13 September FOMC," Societe Generale said in a note.      "A dovish tone from Bernanke should bring some re-assurance  to markets," it said, adding that the ECB will not help shore up  sentiment much. "While the ECB has answered the question of how  more risk sharing can take shape, they are not writing any blank  checks. Conditionality is here to stay, and with it so too is  sovereign risk until the conditionality is fulfilled," it said.      Analysts have said while the ECB's plans to buy government  debt to reduce surging Spanish and Italian borrowing costs will  help soothe market jitters, it does not resolve the fundamental  issue of strengthening the fiscal foundation of the euro zone.      Greece remains a risk trigger for reversing the current  moderately improved sentiment towards Europe.          German Chancellor Angela Merkel, after meeting Greek premier  Antonis Samaras on Friday, repeated that Germany would await a  report by global lenders assessing the country's performance on  its reform targets next month.      She also reiterated that she and French leader Francois  Hollande wanted Greece to remain in the euro zone but that it  must meet its reform targets, while Germany's finance minister  reaffirmed on Saturday his opposition to giving Athens more time  to carry out promised reforms.                With the euro zone's fiscal woes taking a deeper toll on the   global economy, Chinese premier Wen Jiabao said on Saturday  that China will implement new measures aimed at stabilising  export growth in the third quarter.       Growing hopes for more accommodative monetary stance around  the world helped gold break a key resistance which had held for  months, lifting spot gold to a 4-1/2 month high last  week.      Data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Friday  showed that money managers, including hedge funds and other  large speculators, boosted their bullish bets in U.S. gold  futures and options to the largest amount since early May.      Gold posted its biggest weekly gain since January on Friday,  and was trading up 0.2 percent at $1,672.40 an ounce on Monday.      Investors also kept paring positions betting on the euro's  fall last week, while positions in favour of the U.S. dollar  declined further to the lowest in nearly a year, the CFTC said.      The euro steadied at $1.2507, off Friday's low of  $1.2481.      Oil rose, with U.S. crude up 0.7 percent to $96.83 a  barrel and Brent up 0.6 percent to $114.26.  
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