Thursday, October 25, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares retreat, oil falters on investor unease

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares retreat, oil falters on investor unease
Oct 25th 2012, 16:28

Thu Oct 25, 2012 12:28pm EDT

  * U.S. equities falls as U.S. elections, economy weigh      * Dollar hits 4-month high vs yen, euro near break-even      * Commodity markets stabilize after recent declines          By Herbert Lash      NEW YORK, Oct 25 (Reuters) - Global shares retreated and oil  prices faltered on Thursday, as encouraging data from Britain  and China was overshadowed by uncertainty over the U.S.  presidential election and economy.      U.S. business investment showed signs of stalling in  September, an indication that a possible sharp tightening in the  federal budget already is weighing on the economy.         A reading of new orders for capital goods outside of defense  and excluding aircraft was unchanged last month, suggesting  companies are holding back due to fears the U.S. Congress may  fail to avert sharp tax hikes and spending cuts in 2013.      Wall Street reversed early gains that had followed a rise in  European equity markets, and the dollar edged higher against the  euro. Crude oil prices also initially rose, only to retreat  later.      "There is an election coming up that is really very  difficult to project right now. So when uncertainty becomes part  of the mix, guys usually are more likely to lighten their risk  profile a little bit," said Gordon Charlop, a managing director  at Rosenblatt Securities in New York.       "Between some of the numbers we saw that people were  initially happy with but not overly impressed - they weren't  able to reverse the sentiment, and that is the way it feels like  it is trading today."      The latest polls have shown President Barack Obama and  Republican challenger Mitt Romney in a dead heat, with less than  two weeks before the election. With the tightening race creating  many different scenarios, there is the possibility that the  Electoral College winner will not capture the most votes   nationwide.      The Dow Jones industrial average was down 23.02  points, or 0.18 percent, at 13,054.32. The Standard & Poor's 500  Index was down 1.98 points, or 0.14 percent, at 1,406.77.  The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 1.52 points, or 0.05  percent, at 2,980.17.      European shares, which dropped 3 percent earlier in the  week, felt the benefit of the more positive market tone, with  the FTSEurofirst300 index of leading regional shares  rising 0.2 percent to close at a preliminary 1,095.85 points.       Britain emerged from recession in the third quarter, as its  recent hosting of the Olympics helped the economy grow by 1.0  percent, the strongest quarterly growth in gross domestic  product in five years, official data showed.       Comments from a Chinese ministry that the country's factory  output should pick up toward the end of the year and a survey  showing Chinese orders at their highest levels in months also  underpinned investor sentiment.       Oil prices traded near break-even and higher, but analysts  said the overall outlook for oil was bearish.        Brent crude was up 41 cents at $108.26 a barrel,  snapping its longest losing streak since July 2010. U.S. oil   rose 6 cents to $86.79, after settling down for the fifth  straight session.      Gold rose, after a drop to seven-week lows the previous day.  Spot gold prices rose $10.97 to $1,712.90 an ounce.      In the U.S. Treasuries market, benchmark yields touched a  five-week high ahead of the sale of seven-year notes and after  the Federal Reserve on Wednesday stuck to its monetary policy,  prompting some Treasury investors to book profits.      The price of the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note   was down 2/32 to yield 1.7995 percent.       The dollar rallied to a four-month high against the yen as  U.S. data and expectations the Bank of Japan will ease monetary  policy next week favored the greenback.      The dollar hit a high of 80.33 yen, its highest since June  25. It last traded at 80.05, up 0.3 percent on the day,  according to Reuters data.      The euro last traded at 103.74 yen , up 0.2  percent on the day,       Against the dollar, the euro was down 0.1 percent at  1.2956.  
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