Friday, May 17, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares fall as Fed officials talk of QE exit

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares fall as Fed officials talk of QE exit
May 17th 2013, 08:15

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Fri May 17, 2013 4:15am EDT

  * Fed officials urge bank to begin stimulus withdrawal      * Dollar rises to near 10-month highs      * European shares edge back from 5-year highs        By David Brett      LONDON, May 16 (Reuters) - The dollar held firm near a  10-month high versus a basket of currencies on Friday and  European shares fell after a regional Federal Reserve chief said  the U.S. central bank may begin to taper its asset buying this  summer.      European shares were down 0.2 percent at 1,242.49,  edging further back from five-year highs and following a retreat  in Asian stocks and Thursday's late fall on Wall Street, but  still on track for a weekly gain.       "The stock market is driven by liquidity and sooner or later  this must end," KBC senior economist Koen De Leus said.       "In the near-term a correction would be healthy, but on the  whole the market is (still) well supported by the huge amount of  liquidity that is pumped into the system by the central banks."       In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares  outside Japan fell 0.4 percent to 479.33.      The German Bund future slipped at the open as some investors   booked profits after this week's gains, but expectations  central bank policies will remain ultra-easy for months limited  losses.      The Bund future FGBLc1 was 4 ticks lower at 145.27 compared  with 145.31 at Thursday's settlement, while the dollar rose 0.4  percent to 83.944 versus its currency basket, close to  this week's 10-month high of 84.094.      The Fed's quantitative easing programme has helped stabilise  the world's largest economy and sent investors scrambling for  returns, suppressing bond and cash yields, inflating asset  prices and fuelling a global rally in stocks.      San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President John Williams  said on Thursday the Fed could begin easing its monetary  stimulus this summer and end bond buying late this year.         Although Williams does not have a vote in the Fed's  policy-setting panel this year, his comments weighed on U.S.  shares, which have soared to record highs this year, in part  because of  the Fed's purchases of $85 billion a month in bonds.      A trio of hawkish regional Federal Reserve officials  meanwhile called for the U.S. central bank to stop buying  mortgage-backed bonds, citing a recent improvement in the  housing market.       "The Fed realises the impact that (QE) has on markets and  the potential negative impact on risky assets. Therefore they  try to prepare the markets a bit for an eventual end," said BNP  Paribas Fortis Global Markets head of research Philippe Gijsels.  
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