Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, euro fall on continued Cyprus concerns

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, euro fall on continued Cyprus concerns
Mar 19th 2013, 17:15

Tue Mar 19, 2013 1:15pm EDT

  * European shares fall with Cyprus still a concern      * Data latest sign of U.S. housing strength      * German government bonds rise, periphery bonds dip          By Ryan Vlastelica      NEW YORK, March 19 (Reuters) - Global stock markets fell on  Tuesday, extending the previous day's decline as investors  continued to fret about a bail-out plan for Cyprus and the  possible effect on the euro zone should it collapse.      Markets have been volatile, with U.S. stocks opening lower  and then briefly rebounding as investors used strong housing  data as an opportunity to pick up beaten down shares. In midday  trading, however, shares returned to negative territory.      European stocks, along with the euro and oil, had been  pressured on concerns over the risk of failure for a bailout  deal aimed at saving Cyprus from default and its banks from  collapse.       A government spokesman said Cyprus' parliament was likely to  reject plans agreed by euro zone officials over the weekend to  part-fund a 10 billion euro rescue of the island by seizing  between 6.75 percent and 9.9 percent of deposits in Cypriot  banks.       "This could be a flash in the pan but it is a reminder to  investors that the situation in Europe is not resolved. It could  be the start of a spring correction just as we saw in 2011 and  2012," Andrew Milligan, global head of strategy for Standard  Life Investments in Edinburgh, said in a note.      Euro zone ministers have urged Cyprus to let smaller savers  escape the levy, but if parliament cannot agree, it would put  the bailout in jeopardy and raise the risk of default.         The euro fell and hit a session low against the  dollar, while European shares closed 0.4 percent lower.  London's FTSE 100 slipped 0.3 percent and Paris's CAC-40   fell 1.3 percent while Frankfurt's DAX fell 0.8  percent. MSCI's measure of global stock markets   was off 0.5 percent.      In the United States, the Dow Jones industrial average   was down 44.62 points, or 0.31 percent, at 14,407.44. The  Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 9.21 points, or 0.59  percent, at 1,542.89. The Nasdaq Composite Index was  down 19.66 points, or 0.61 percent, at 3,217.93      The early gains in U.S. stocks came on data showing that  groundbreaking for new homes climbed in February, a sign the  nation's housing market recovery was gathering steam.         According to the latest Reuters poll of analysts, the S&P  500 is expected soon to hit a record high, though the blistering  rise in equities so far in 2013 is unlikely to last.              BUND BOUNCE      The plan to seize deposits in Cyprus shredded confidence in  the 100,000 euro ($129,600) guarantee on savings offered across  the European Union and raised fears of bank runs in other  debt-strained countries, putting safe-haven German government  bonds again in demand.      The Bund future built gains steadily through the  morning before solid ZEW data tempered some of the demand,  leaving it up 0.5 percent at 144.67. The benchmark 10-year U.S.  Treasury note was up 16/32, the yield at 1.8991  percent.       "We are just waiting for another headline out of Cyprus,"  one trader said, adding that buying Bunds "is the only trade to  have on."            ECB BACKSTOP      While Cyprus' problems are threatening to disrupt the calm  brought to the bloc over the last eight months by the European  Central Bank's promise to protect troubled countries, that  guarantee has also kept the market reaction muted.      With stock markets in many parts of the world at or near  long-term highs, analysts are taking the drops of the past few  sessions in stride.      With the exception of German government bonds, the knee-jerk  flight to safety seen on Monday was showing signs of subsiding.      The cost of insuring the debt of southern euro zone  countries against default via credit default swaps was virtually  unchanged at midday, and the dollar was flat against a basket of  major currencies after Monday's rise.      In Asian trading, Japanese stocks jumped 2 percent and the  recovery in general risk sentiment supported Asian credit  markets, narrowing the spread on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan  investment-grade index by five basis points.       Brent crude oil remained sensitive to the jitters,  however, falling 1.2 percent to $108.22. If the situation in the  euro zone deteriorates again, analysts warn it could affect the  health of the global economy.  
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