Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares ease, euro resilient on ECB hopes

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares ease, euro resilient on ECB hopes
Aug 22nd 2012, 00:36

Tue Aug 21, 2012 8:36pm EDT

  * MSCI Asia ex-Japan falls 0.3 pct, Nikkei down 0.4 pct      * Euro near seven-week high vs dollar      * Global miner BHP seen hit by China slow down        By Chikako Mogi      TOKYO, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Asian shares fell after recent  rally but the euro held near a seven-week high on Wednesday on  views the European Central Bank will act to rein in surging euro  zone borrowing costs and policymakers will find ways to keep  Greece on lifelines.      Top global miner BHP Billiton may put three mega projects on  hold on Wednesday when it is expected to report its first annual  profit fall in three years due to rising costs and falling  commodity prices.      BHP's woes will wrap up a torrid earnings season for the  world's biggest miners, all battered by weaker prices for iron  ore, copper, coal, nickel and aluminium as economic growth in  big-buyer China slows to its weakest pace in a decade.      MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   was down 0.3 percent while Japan's Nikkei stock  average fell 0.4 percent.       Data on Wednesday showed Japan's exports fell 8.1 percent in  July from a year earlier, boding ill for the fragile economy  heavily dependent on overseas demand.       Asian credit markets were steady, with the spread on the  iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment-grade index barely  changed and pinned near its tightest level in five months.      Asian equities are not yet overbought, judging from the  amount of net foreign buying, which stood at $8.1 billion so far  in August, Credit Suisse said in a research note. They define  markets to be overbought when net foreign buying on a rolling  12-month basis is 1 percent of market capitalisation or more and  net foreign buying over two months is 0.6 percent or more.      "On this definition, we are not yet overbought, as net  foreign buying over the past 12 months is 0.6 percent of market  cap, and over the past two months is 0.26 percent," it said.                  Speculation that the ECB will take a decisive step to cut   borrowing costs in Spain and Italy to help reduce their high  public debts gained further momentum with an article in London's  Daily Telegraph, which said the ECB was examining plans to put a  hard cap on Spanish and Italian yields.      A similar report on the ECB's bond-buying scheme in German  media was on Monday denied by the bank, which also repeated its   stance over the latest British report.      Meanwhile, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has voiced  support for the ECB's crisis-fighting strategy last week.          "The market rallied on growing convictions that Germany  stands ready to do more to keep the eurozone united. Merkel's  government seems more willing to ease the official debt burden  on Greece, as long as the basic elements of the second bailout  program remain," Barclays Capital said in a research note.      The euro traded at $1.2470, not far from $1.2488 hit  on Tuesday, its highest since July 5.      The dollar was down 0.1 percent against the yen at 79.24 yen  , off a five-week high at 79.66 yen hit on Monday.  The dollar index measured against key currencies hovered  near its seven-week low touched the previous day.       U.S. stocks fell on Tuesday as investors took profits after  driving the Standard & Poor's 500 index to a four-year  high, while European shares rose and yields in Spain and Italy  fell further. Spain's 10-year debt yields have  shed about 8 percent this month.             A rise in the CBOE Volatility Index, a gauge of Wall  Street's risk sensitivity, U.S. Treasury yields capped at recent  highs and many assets failing to top the upside of their ranges  suggested, however, investor were not entirely convinced yet of  a breakthrough in the three-year euro zone debt crisis.        Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is holding bilateral  talks with leaders of France, Germany and the Eurogroup this  week to seek concessions for its austerity-to-bailout swap. His  meeting with Merkel is set for Friday.      Oil inched higher, with Brent up 0.2 percent to  $114.81 a barrel and U.S. crude up 0.1 percent at $96.90.      Spot gold eased to $1,637.21 an ounce after hitting a  3-1/2 month high of $1,641.20 on Tuesday, while platinum   also retreated from its highest since early May at $1,508.25 hit  the previous session.      The worst U.S. drought in half a century hoisted soybeans on  Tuesday to another peak, and corn up nearly 2 percent.  
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