Thursday, March 28, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks, euro gain as Cyprus banks reopen

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks, euro gain as Cyprus banks reopen
Mar 28th 2013, 14:44

Thu Mar 28, 2013 10:44am EDT

  * Wall Street stocks mostly higher in choppy trade      * Euro edges up from 4-month low vs U.S. dollar      * European shares rebound as Cyprus tensions ease      * Trading subdued before Easter holiday weekend          By Ellen Freilich      NEW YORK, March 28 (Reuters) - Major stock markets recovered  and the euro edged off a four-month low on Thursday, as banks in  Cyprus reopened to relative calm following the island's  controversial bailout.      On Wall Street, stocks moved in and out of positive  territory in choppy, pre-holiday trade.       There was little sign of the mass panic that some had feared  as the country's banks reopened after a forced closure of almost  two weeks, albeit with tight capital controls to prevent  depositors from cleaning out their vaults.       "Contagion from Cyprus to other banks in the periphery will   be limited", Barclays analysts Rajiv Setia and Laurent Fransolet  said in a research note. But the decision to include senior debt  holders and large depositors in the Cyprus bailout could have a  "lasting effect" on the way investors perceive weaker euro area  banks, they added.      Despite its rise, the euro was seen to be vulnerable to the  Cyprus crisis which could encourage anxious investors to sell  euro zone assets and seek the safety of the U.S. dollar.      PIMCO, the world's largest bond fund, said last week it had   reduced allocations to the euro in response to the planned levy  on bank deposits in Cyprus, citing the levy as "a significant  departure" in euro zone policy from other reserve currencies.          Cyprus's 10 billion euro rescue deal with its European  partners at the weekend is the first euro zone bailout to impose  losses on bank depositors, and has raised the prospect of savers  withdrawing their money from banks.      European Central Bank data showed some depositors began to  take money out of their accounts in February when the  possibility that depositors would take a haircut in a bailout  deal, but the calm as bank employees returned to work helped  settle early market jitters.       The euro, which has dropped around 2.0 percent over  the last couple of weeks, climbed back above $1.28 on Thursday,  up from a four-month low against the U.S. dollar and  one-month low against the yen       Uncertainty has been amplified by an unexpected rise in  German unemployment in March in data reported on Thursday, the  lack of a government in Italy following inconclusive elections,  and traditional end-of-quarter caution ahead of the Easter  holiday.       But Germany's unemployment rise was countered by stronger  retail sales and a surprise rebound in Italian business  confidence.       European stock markets shrugged off their early nerves  though as news of calm in Cyprus was reported. With benchmark  stock indexes in London, Frankfurt and Paris all higher, the  FTSEurofirst 300 climbed 0.6 percent.      U.S. Treasuries and German government bonds,   assets investors turn to for safety slipped.      Benchmark 10-year Treasury notes last traded  down 3/32 in price to yield 1.857 percent, up 1.2 basis points  from Wednesday's close.       Treasuries held those losses after the U.S. government   raised its reading on U.S. economic growth in the fourth quarter  of 2012 while reporting a bigger-than-expected rise in weekly  jobless claims in the latest week.      Gold slipped below $1,600 an ounce on Thursday, as banks  reopened in Cyprus for the first time in two weeks without signs  of panic withdrawals, sapping demand for low-risk assets.      Gold hit a one-month high of $1,616.36 last week on concerns  the $10 billion euro rescue deal for Cyprus, which will leave  big depositors and private bondholders with huge losses, could  become a template for future bank bailouts in the euro zone.      Gold was down 0.5 percent to $1,597 an ounce by 1324  GMT. Spot prices were still set for a one percent gain in March,  their first monthly rise in six months. U.S. gold futures   dropped 0.6 percent to $1,596.20 an ounce.         U.S. crude futures hovered above $96 a barrel early on  Thursday as banks reopened in Cyprus. NYMEX crude for May  delivery was down 5 cents at $96.53 a barrel by 1358 GMT.      London Brent crude for May delivery was down 4 cents  at $109.29, after finishing 33 cents higher at $109.69 a   barrel the previous session.  
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