Friday, May 10, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Yen hits 4-1/2-year low vs dollar, oil and gold tumble

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Yen hits 4-1/2-year low vs dollar, oil and gold tumble
May 10th 2013, 20:47

Fri May 10, 2013 4:47pm EDT

  * Yen slides against dollar after bond-holding data      * Upbeat U.S. data, Japanese bond buys drive yen move      * Government debt falls as Japanese boost foreign holdings      * European shares rise; Dow, S&P at record closing highs          By Herbert Lash      NEW YORK, May 10 (Reuters) - The yen slid to a 4-1/2-year  low against the dollar on Friday, triggering a sell-off in oil  and gold as well as safe-haven U.S. and German debt, after  recent signs of strength in the U.S. labor market added to  bullish sentiment on the dollar.      Wall Street surged at day's end, pushing both the Dow and  the S&P 500 to record closing highs.      Data on bond holdings in Japan showed the Japanese were  buying more foreign assets, and the yen's collapse reverberated  throughout financial markets. Conflicting signals about how  investors view the economic outlook added to the yen's wide  impact.      The greenback rallied broadly as recent data indicating an  improving U.S. jobs market sparked speculation the Federal  Reserve may scale back monetary easing. The policy was designed  to bolster the economy, and it also has lifted the stock market.      The firmer dollar pressured oil, as the strength of the  dollar makes commodities more expensive for holders of other  currencies. The fall in oil was intensified by rising supplies  and doubts over the strength of China's economy.       "There are two fundamental themes. The first is that despite  signs of slower U.S. growth here in the second quarter, the U.S.   labor market continues to improve," said Marc Chandler, head of  global currency strategy and Brown Brothers Harriman in New  York.      "The second is the news reported in Tokyo ... that Japanese  investors turned buyers of foreign bonds," he said, calling it  an important signal for the "yen bears."      The bearish investors were already selling the yen on  expectations that Japanese investors would sell as the Bank of  Japan's stimulus measures displaced them from the local bond  market, Chandler said.      The Japanese currency fell to 101.98 yen per dollar,  the lowest since October 2008. The dollar was last at 101.56  yen, up 0.97 percent on the day.      With the Japanese currency breaching the 100 level, analysts  expect the yen to fall further. Some see the dollar rising to  105 yen this summer and to 110 by the end of the year.            JAPAN'S LONG-AWAITED FORAY ABROAD      Overnight data showed that Japanese investors had bought  309.9 billion yen ($3.1 billion) in foreign bonds in the week  through May 4 after purchasing 204.4 billion yen in the prior  week, according to the Ministry of Finance.       Equities in Europe closed higher, while Wall Street stocks  staged a late rally and all three major indexes posted gains for  a third straight week.      German Bunds slid to their lowest level in over a month as  Bund futures, which hit a record high of 147.20 last  week, fell more than a point to a low of 144.43 and were on  course for their biggest one-week fall since March 10.      Bund futures settled down 121 ticks at 144.66.       The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was  down 23/32 in price to yield 1.893 percent.      The slump in the Japanese currency was sparked by a drop in  weekly U.S. jobless claims data on Thursday, which added to  evidence of a rapidly improving employment market first seen in  the prior week's nonfarm payrolls report.       The move was given a further push by the data on Japanese  investors' foreign bond purchases. The data confirmed widespread  expectations that the Bank of Japan's aggressive stimulus plans  would result in a massive flight of money out of the country in  a search for higher-yielding investments.      "We've had back-to-back good news in U.S. figures and you  have to wind the clock back six to eight weeks to find the last  time we had that," said Nick Parsons, head of market strategy at   National Australia Bank.      "Once we got through 100 (yen) and the Japanese bond buying  data came out, that added fuel to the fire," he said.      The yen's move came as finance ministers and central bankers  of the Group of 7 countries gathered for a two-day meeting near  London, to discuss ways to stimulate growth, with currency  movements likely to be one of the main topics on the agenda.         Stocks on Wall Street gained as a rise in Google Inc   and other technology shares offset a slide in energy  shares.      Nvidia Corp and Priceline.com Inc rose a  day after reporting quarterly results. Both companies beat  profit expectations, even as Priceline gave a second-quarter  outlook that disappointed.        "We're getting more constructive on the second half of the  year as both the market and the economy are picking up," said  Terry DuFrene, investment specialist for JP Morgan Private Bank  in New Orleans.      "While it has caught us by surprise how much markets have  come up, and we might see a decline of 5 percent, we don't see  any meaningful pullback ahead," DuFrene said.      The Dow Jones industrial average closed up 35.87  points, or 0.24 percent, at 15,118.49. The Standard & Poor's 500  Index rose 7.03 points, or 0.43 percent, at 1,633.70. The  Nasdaq Composite Index gained 27.41 points, or 0.80  percent, at 3,436.58.       MSCI's world equity index, which tracks  stocks in 45 countries, was down 0.07 percent, but ended a third  week of gains at a five-year high.      The FTSEurofirst 300 index of leading European  shares closed up 0.35 percent at 1,233.49.            Oil fell heavily on the firmer dollar, with the June  contract for North Sea Brent falling to $101.45 a barrel before  trimming some losses.      Brent crude oil settled down 56 cents at $103.91.  U.S. crude eased 35 cents to settle at $96.04 a barrel.      Spot gold fell as low as $1,420.60 an ounce.      U.S. Comex gold futures for June delivery settled  down $32 at $1,436.60 an ounce.  
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