Thursday, August 23, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares retreat on dim outlook for growth, Fed stimulus

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares retreat on dim outlook for growth, Fed stimulus
Aug 24th 2012, 00:19

Thu Aug 23, 2012 8:19pm EDT

  * MSCI Asia ex-Japan down 0.5 pct, off two-week peak, Nikkei  opens down 1.2 pct      * Euro holds near 7-week high vs dollar      * Dollar inches up vs yen        By Chikako Mogi      TOKYO, Aug 24 (Reuters) - Asian shares retreated from a  two-week high on Friday on scaled back expectations of more  stimulus from the U.S. Federal Reserve and growth concerns after  manufacturing surveys from the euro zone and China depicted a  bleak outlook.      But the euro was underpinned by sustained hopes of European  Central Bank's action to rein in surging sovereign debt yields  in Spain and Italy, as well as a report saying Spain is  negotiating with euro zone partners over conditions for aid to  drive down its borrowing costs.       MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   fell 0.5 percent after gaining as much as 1  percent to a two-week high the day before.       Japan's Nikkei stock average opened down 1.2  percent.          "I think the Nikkei's uptrend is still in place but unless  we have additional positive factors, there will be profit-taking  after recent gains," said Toshiyuki Kanayama, market analyst at  Monex Securities.      South Korean stocks were also seen undergoing a technical  correction, tracking global shares.      "Expectations for fresh stimulus action have been largely  reflected in shares, so shares will continue to take a breather  next week," said Kim Young-joon, an analyst at SK Securities.      A global market rally, spurred by the minutes of the Fed's  July 31-Aug. 1 meeting released on Wednesday which indicated the  Fed might be ready for another round of monetary stimulus,  stalled after such expectations fizzled out.         U.S. stocks eased as James Bullard, president of the Federal  Reserve Bank of St. Louis, a non-voting member of the Fed, told  CNBC television that U.S. data has been somewhat better since  then and the minutes were "a bit stale."         European stocks fell on global growth concerns on Thursday  after business surveys in China and the euro zone showed the  world economy was slowing down, while U.S. manufacturing  activity improved slightly in August even when weekly jobless  claims unexpectedly ticked higher last week.      A Reuters poll showed on Friday big Japanese manufacturers'  sentiment worsened in August and is expected to improve only  slightly in the coming months, as Europe's debt crisis, a global  slowdown and a stubbornly strong yen take their toll on the  export-reliant economy.       While the outlook for U.S. monetary policy remains unclear,  the ECB earlier this month indicated it may resume buying  government bonds to calm euro zone debt markets, and investors  have been building up hopes the bank will soon provide details  of its bond-buying scheme, as early as at its Sept. 6 meeting.           "The bottom line for us is that there are enough clear signs  to tell us we should be primed for major developments from the  ECB in the months ahead," said Westpac Institutional Bank in a  note.      The euro traded at $1.2558, near a seven-week high of  $1.2590 hit on Thursday. The dollar inched up 0.1 percent to  78.57 yen.                  EUROPE FULL PLATE      European leaders, returning from their summer vacation, have  resumed negotiations over aid to troubled Greece and Spain.      Three sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters on  Thursday that Spain is in talks over possible aid, although the  country has not made a final decision to request a bailout, and  no specific figure for aid has been discussed.       Germany and France kept pressures high on Greece on  Thursday, telling Athens it should not expect leeway on its  bailout agreement unless it sticks to tough reform targets.  Leaders of Germany and Greece meet later on Friday.      With talks ongoing in an attempt to resolve the euro zone's  three-year debt crisis, Morgan Stanley said it remained bullish  on risky assets and was selling currencies that benefited from  safe-havens through early summer, mainly against the Euro.      It is bearish on the yen, one such safe-haven currency.      "Amid rallying asset prices, investors seeing better  risk/reward ratios in higher yielding currencies will reallocate  portfolios away from the JPY, in our view," it said.      Asian credit spreads weakened with the retreat in shares,  sending the spread on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment-grade  index wider by 2 basis points.      Spot gold stood at $1,668 an ounce, off its  four-month high of $1,674.80 hit on Thursday.      Oil eased, with U.S. crude down 0.4 percent to $95.90  a barrel and Brent falling 0.3 percent to $114.66.  
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