Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares ease, euro steady ahead Bernanke speech

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares ease, euro steady ahead Bernanke speech
Aug 30th 2012, 00:31

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Wed Aug 29, 2012 8:31pm EDT

  * MSCI Asia ex-Japan eases 0.2 pct, Nikkei opens down 0.1  pct      * Aussie hits 1-month low vs USD, euro in recent ranges        By Chikako Mogi      TOKYO, Aug 30 (Reuters) - Asian shares eased and major  currencies stayed range-bound on Thursday as investors avoided  betting on direction before a speech by U.S. Federal Reserve  Chairman Ben Bernanke, with focus on whether there will be any  hint about further U.S. stimulus.      MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   inched down 0.2 percent and Japan's Nikkei stock  average opened down 0.1 percent.       U.S. crude oil fell 0.4 percent to $95.11 a barrel on  Thursday, after slipping the previous day as Gulf Coast  refineries and platforms seemed to have escaped damage from  Hurricane Isaac.       European shares eased in thin volume while U.S. stocks edged  higher on Wednesday in the lightest trading of the year, ahead  of Friday's speech from Bernanke at the Jackson Hole meeting of  central bankers and economists.      The venue takes place before the Fed's Sept. 12-13 policy  meeting, where expectations remain for the U.S. central bank to  take some form of easing step to underpin the fragile economy.  Bernanke has used the Jackson Hole event in the previous two  years to signal the Fed's easy policy intentions.      U.S. Treasuries prices fell on Wednesday to make room for  new debt supply, but losses were limited by expectations for an   easing signal from Bernanke, as well as for the European Central  Bank to take bold action to tackle the region's debt crisis.      "With risk somewhat bid, the market continues to hunt for  positions with the back end of the US Treasury curve still in  focus but with little gusto, as all eyes are now on the Bernanke  speech on Friday," said Sebastien Galy, strategist at Societe  Generale.      The euro traded steady at $1.2530 and the dollar  inched up 0.1 percent against the yen to 78.72. The euro  stood little changed against the yen at 98.65.          Speculation the ECB was working ahead on a plan to buy bonds  to lower peripheral euro zone states' borrowing costs rose after  ECB chief Mario Draghi wrote in an opinion piece in a German  newspaper on Wednesday that the bank needed to employ  "exceptional measures."       Draghi cancelled his attendance at Jackson Hole due to a  heavy workload as he gears up for the bank's critical  policy-setting meeting on Sept. 6, with markets expecting the  central bank to provide details of the bond-buying scheme.            Markets might remain in ranges for weeks beyond Jackson Hole  and the ECB meeting, with key events lined up that could clarify  the timing of any further easing by the Fed, and the roadmap for  the euro zone's crisis-management.      A key U.S. jobs report is due on Sept. 7 and the German  constitutional court rules on the region's bailout funds on  Sept. 12, before euro zone finance ministers meet on Sept.  14-15.      A report on Greece by its international lenders is due by  early October to determine whether Athens will get bailout.      The currency options market suggested players were not  expecting sharp price swings, with one-month euro/dollar  volatility still below 10 percent.      Later on Thursday, Italy faces a test of investor confidence  when it sells 6.5 billion euro longer-dated bonds. Italian  government bond yields fell on Wednesday as dealers sensed good  demand for Thursday's issuance after two successful auctions  earlier this week.      Growth worries continue to weigh on markets sensitive to  commodities linked to industrial demand.      The Australian dollar fell to a one-month low around $1.0340   on Thursday, pressured by a steep drop in spot iron ore  prices, which hit their lowest levels since late 2009 . The ore is Australia's single biggest export  earner.      The Shanghai Composite index hit its lowest close  since February 2009 on Wednesday on China's economic slowdown   and a lack of signs for blunter policy measures.      But the Standard & Poor's 500 Index traded near a  four-year high.      Wednesday's data showed pending home sales rose more than   forecast and the Fed said in its Beige Book of anecdotal  information on nationwide business activity that the U.S.  economy continued to grow gradually in July and early August  although manufacturing activity was softening.  
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