Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares slip as government bonds gain, Greece eyed

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares slip as government bonds gain, Greece eyed
Aug 22nd 2012, 14:54

Wed Aug 22, 2012 10:54am EDT

  * Wall Street and European shares slip      * Euro hovers near recent seven-week high vs US dollar      * Greek meetings, Fed minutes eyed      * Japan July exports slump most in six months          By Wanfeng Zhou      NEW YORK, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Shares prices slipped from  3-1/2 month highs on major world markets on Wednesday and  government bond yields fell as Greek and European officials met  on the eurozone debt crisis and after weak Japanese economic  data stoked concern about global growth.      The MSCI global share index fell 0.5 percent  to 324.98 after hitting its highest level since early May on  Tuesday.       Wall Street stocks retreated, a day after the S&P 500 index  hit a four-year intraday high. The Dow Jones industrial average   was down 21.05 points, or 0.16 percent, at 13,182.53. The  Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 0.98 points, or 0.07  percent, at 1,412.19. The Nasdaq Composite Index was  down 0.07 points, or 0.00 percent, at 3,067.19.       European shares fell from a recent 13-month high as traders  locked in gains sparked by hopes of central bank actions to  contain the debt crisis and stimulate growth. The FTSEurofirst  300 index of European shares slipped 1 percent.      Investors flocked to safe-haven U.S. Treasuries after Japan  said exports slumped the most in six months in July as shipments  to Europe and China fell, rekindling fears over the rate of  world economic growth.      "The Treasury market is trading higher this morning as at  least a few investors still believe that the economy may have  some rough winds ahead, and that the global economy might derail  the optimism," said Kevin Giddis, head of fixed income capital  markets at Morgan Keegan in Memphis, Tennessee.      Benchmark U.S. 10-year notes were trading 14/32  higher in price to yield 1.7535 percent, down from 1.80 percent  late Tuesday.       German Bund futures rose to 142.54.      Investors also awaited the minutes of the U.S. Federal  Reserve's most recent meeting, due later on Wednesday and will  parse for clues on whether the central bank is gearing up for  more policy aid as early as its September meeting.      The euro reversed early losses to trade little  changed at $1.2472, not far from a seven-week high of $1.2488 on  Reuters data on Tuesday.      Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras will meet Eurogroup  chief Jean-Claude Juncker on Wednesday and German Chancellor  Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande later this  week. He is expected to broach the idea of giving Greece more  time to implement budget cuts.       "Any comments that are constructive, giving Greece at least  a chance to get an additional bailout package, is something that  could support the euro further," said Ulrich Leuchtmann, head of  FX research at Commerzbank in London.            GOOD NEWS PRICED IN      Stocks have rallied lately on hopes the European Central  Bank will soon start buying Spanish and Italian government bonds  to lower borrowing costs, but some analysts said further gains  could be limited.      The ECB holds its next policy meeting on Sept. 6, the German  constitutional court rules on Sept. 12 on the euro zone's  permanent bailout fund, and European finance ministers meet on  Sept. 14 and 15.      "It's going to be fascinating after the ECB meeting to see  what direction the markets take; we've priced in a lot of the  good news already, so I certainly don't think we'll see it rally  much), unless we get surprises on the upside," said Ben Le Brun,  a Sydney-based market analyst at OptionsXpress.      Brent shed 49 cents to $114.15 after hitting a  session low of $113.53. U.S. crude lost 19 cents to  $96.65 per barrel.      Investors were on edge over Europe, though the market is  underpinned by Middle East tensions and their potential for  supply disruption.       Platinum rose to its highest since early May and was set for  its biggest one-week gain in 10 months after signs of spreading  unrest in top producer South Africa ignited concern among  investors over supply.      Spot platinum was up at $1,517.99 an ounce , having  risen earlier to a high of $1,524.50. The price has risen by 9.2  percent since Wednesday last week, making this the largest  one-week rally since October 2011.      Spot gold rose to $1,641.20 an ounce.  
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