Thursday, November 29, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks and euro pare advance on Boehner comments

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks and euro pare advance on Boehner comments
Nov 29th 2012, 19:16

Thu Nov 29, 2012 2:16pm EST

  * U.S. fiscal talks the big driver of markets globally      * U.S. Treasuries prices rise as debt talks drive safety bid        NEW YORK, Nov 29 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks and the euro pared  some gains on Thursday after top Republican lawmaker John  Boehner said there had been no substantive progress in the last  two weeks in talks to reach a budget deal.      Boehner, the speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives,  said he had no idea what compromises President Barack Obama is  willing to make on spending cuts. He said U.S. Treasury  Secretary Timothy Geithner, the White House's top liaison to  Congress whom he met on Thursday, gave no new substantive plan  for reaching an agreement on the budget.       Boehner's comments rattled investors who had earlier driven  a benchmark world stock index to a three-week high alongside a  rally in the euro and commodities. Hopes had risen that U.S.  political leaders would reach a deal to avert $600 billion in  spending cuts and tax hikes that some economists believe could  tip the world's biggest economy back into recession.      U.S. Democratic Senate leader Harry Reid on Thursday said  Democrats are still waiting for a reasonable proposal from  Republicans to resolve a stalemate over the so-called fiscal  cliff of tax hikes and spending cuts looming at year's end.  .      "When the sentiment is that nothing is going to get done, it  does create a lot of anxiety and selling pressure. If there's  any sense of progress, then the market seems to rally," said  Eric Kuby, chief investment officer at North Star Investment  Management in Chicago. "I think we're hostage to this for the  rest of the year."      The fiscal cliff is the biggest risk facing global markets  in the final weeks of the year, following an agreement earlier  this week on fresh aid for Greece.       The Dow Jones industrial average was up 48.09 points,  or 0.37 percent, at 13,033.20. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index    was up 7.03 points, or 0.50 percent, at 1,416.96. The  Nasdaq Composite Index  was up 19.50 points, or 0.65  percent, at 3,011.28.       The MSCI global equities index was up 0.9  percent at 332.42 points, after earlier touching its highest  level since Nov. 7.      The FTSE Eurofirst 300 index finished up 1.1  percent, with the close of stock markets there almost coinciding  with Boehner's comments. It was the highest close for the  benchmark European index since July 2011. Mining stocks, which  are seen as among the riskiest equity sectors because they are  more sensitive to changes in economic sentiment, were the best  performers.       Good demand at a bond sale by Italy, where yields fell to  their lowest level in two years, added to signs the crisis in  the euro area has begun to ease and helped bolster optimism  earlier in the global day.       Traders said until a deal was done in Washington, share  markets were likely to remain skittish. U.S. government debt  prices rose on Thursday on safe-haven demand from investors who  were rattled about the progress of budget talks in Washington.       The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was up  5/32, with the yield at 1.6147 percent.      There is very little conviction with all the political  headlines," said Carl Lantz, chief U.S. interest rate strategist  at Credit Suisse in New York.               RISK FLOWS CHANGE      Safe-haven German government bonds fell as investors  returned to riskier assets before Boehner's comments, edging the  benchmark 10-year debt yields up slightly to 1.37 percent  .      The better tone allowed Italy to auction successfully six  billion euros ($7.75 billion) of new five- and 10-year debt,  which was expected to complete Italy's funding needs for the  year. The yield on the 10-year bond was around  the lowest since November 2010.       Spain announced it would sell some more bonds at an auction  on Dec. 5, although it has completed raising all the money it  needs for this year.      Italian and Spanish debt have benefited in recent months  from the European Central Bank's pledge to buy sovereign debt if  countries ask for aid first. Although that has not happened yet,  the prospect of a central bank backstop has made investors  reluctant to sell and has pushed them back into those markets.      A fall in Italian and Spanish yields helped lift the euro  against the dollar by 0.2 percent to $1.2973, with the  hopes for a U.S. fiscal deal adding to support for the common  currency.       Commodity markets also got some support from the U.S. fiscal  deal hopes, while mounting tension in the Middle East bolstered  oil prices on supply concerns. U.S. crude oil futures   rose $1.62 to $88.11 a barrel, and Brent climbed $1.38  to $110.90 a barrel.           Spot gold was up 0.5 percent at $1,727.34 an ounce,  after a 1.3 percent tumble on Wednesday, the biggest daily  decline in nearly four weeks.  
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