Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares hit 3-mth high as policy optimism persists

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares hit 3-mth high as policy optimism persists
Aug 8th 2012, 00:31

Tue Aug 7, 2012 8:31pm EDT

  * MSCI Asia ex-Japan up 0.2 pct, Nikkei opens up 1 pct      * Euro off highs, dollar/yen stabilises      * iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment-grade index at 5-mth low        By Chikako Mogi      TOKYO, Aug 8 (Reuters) - Asian shares rose to a three-month  high on Wednesday, supported by expectations that policymakers  will soon decisively address the euro zone fiscal crisis and  declining global growth.       MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   inched up 0.2 percent after world stocks   rose to a three-month high on Tuesday, shrugging  off soft data showing further contraction in Italy and a fall in  factory orders in Germany.      Japan's Nikkei stock average opened up 1 percent.         "Despite the lack of fundamental improvement, equities  continue to grind higher, driven in recent sessions by cyclical  sectors and small caps, which had lagged the recovery back  toward the April 2012 highs," Barclays Capital analysts said in   a research note.      "The possibility that the market is looking past policy  uncertainty leads us to conclude that investors should not fight  the rally," they said.      As risk appetite recovered on hopes that global policymakers  will act to help resolve the euro zone's three-year debt crisis,  demand weakened for safe-haven assets such as U.S. Treasuries  and German government bonds, driving benchmark Treasury yields  up to a one-month high on Tuesday.      Asian credit markets firmed, with the spread on the iTraxx  Asia ex-Japan investment-grade index tightening by  2 basis points and hovering near its lowest since March.      Oil prices fell after racing up to a 12-week high on Tuesday  on expectations of further economic stimulus, supply worries  linked to an expected drop in North Sea output next month,  Middle East tensions and the Gulf of Mexico hurricane season.      Brent crude futures fell 0.4 percent to $111.54 a  barrel and U.S. crude eased 0.4 percent to $93.28 a  barrel.                In the absence of major economic data or events, investors  will wait for data from China due on Thursday, including  industrial production, retail sales and inflation, for  indications the world's second-largest economy can pick up  momentum in the second half of the year from a lacklustre first  half.         The euro was down 0.1 percent at $1.2386, off a  one-month high of $1.2444 hit on Monday. The safe-haven yen also  retreated from its recent high against the dollar, trading on  Wednesday at 78.60 yen.      On top of hopes the European Central Bank will soon start  buying bonds to help contain surging borrowing costs for Spain,  sentiment was boosted by Italy's Prime Minister Mario Monti  winning a confidence vote on Tuesday on a bill to cut spending,  which comes in addition to his austerity package passed in  December.      But markets were still worried by Germany continuing to   oppose any large-scale bond-buying programme while Greece is  walking a tightrope over its deficit chasm, awaiting global  creditors to approve bailout funds.      A Greek exit from the euro zone would be manageable but is  not desirable, Eurogroup President Jean-Claude Juncker said in  an interview with Germany's WDR television posted on the  Luxembourg government's website on Tuesday.       "For now, the disparate and 'off the cuff' talk from the  politicians indicates that the debate on what to do is still  ongoing. We don't see the debate over Greece affecting risk  sentiment much more over August. The risks for later in  September and beyond remain real however," Societe Generale said  in a research note.  
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