Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares flat ahead of Bernanke, euro edges lower

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares flat ahead of Bernanke, euro edges lower
May 21st 2013, 14:36

Tue May 21, 2013 10:36am EDT

  * Shares flat ahead of Bernanke testimony on Wednesday, Home  Depot rallies      * Dollar index firmer, but down from near 3-year high      * Yen dips after Japanese minister says seeks 'balance' for  currency          By Ryan Vlastelica      NEW YORK, May 21 (Reuters) - Stock markets around the world  were little changed on Tuesday as investors awaited an update on  the future of the U.S. Federal Reserve's stimulus program.      U.S. shares continued to hover around five-year highs while  the dollar rose and gold fell. The euro was weaker, and a  slowdown in British inflation sent sterling to a 7-week low on  the view it could give the Bank of England more leeway to  support the economy. The yen lost ground after a Japanese  minister rowed back on remarks suggesting the currency had  weakened enough.      The constant drip of global central bank stimulus during the  financial crisis has pushed many financial markets to their  highest levels in years and limited market declines, but in  recent weeks Fed officials have started talking more openly  about scaling back the bank's support.      That has made Wednesday's release of minutes from the  central bank's last meeting and Fed chairman Ben Bernanke's  testimony in Congress the main focus for markets waiting for the  first signs of a clear shift in attitude.      Markets are "nervous" ahead of the testimony, "but not  enough to take any action," said Kim Forrest, senior equity  research analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group in Pittsburgh.      Economists expect Bernanke to deliver a steady message on  the bank's policy when he speaks to Congress. But any hint that  it plans to scale back its support could unsettle markets.      The usually dovish Chicago Fed president Charles Evans said  on Monday that while the pickup in the U.S. jobs market  continued he was "open-minded" about slowing the bank's  bond-buying, and mentioned the idea of simply halting it.         "With the economic numbers being pretty good in the States,  there may be an easing back of QE (bond-buying stimulus) sooner  rather than later," said Berkeley Futures associate director  Richard Griffiths.      The dollar was up 0.4 percent against a basket of  major currencies at midday in Europe, comfortably below its  recent three-year high.       The Dow Jones industrial average was up 54.37 points,  or 0.35 percent, at 15,389.65. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index   was up 4.48 points, or 0.27 percent, at 1,670.77. The  Nasdaq Composite Index was up 6.29 points, or 0.18  percent, at 3,502.75.      U.S. equities were supported by Home Depot, which  raised its full-year profit outlook as it benefited from a  recovery in the housing market.       Having hit a five-year high on Monday, top European shares   were flat as traders took the uncertainty as a cue to  lock in some of the recent sharp gains.      The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was  down 8/32, with the yield at 1.991 percent.            GREECE LIGHTENING      If the Fed does tighten policy by slowing its bond-buying,  benchmark bond yields would be pushed up, and in the debt  market, safe-haven German Bund futures lost ground,  dropping 0.4 percent.      In Greece, 10-year yields fell below 30-year ones for the  first time in three years - popping its bond curve back into a  more normal shape in a sign that some are starting to believe  the worst may be over for the euro zone's most troubled economy.      "The perception of investors has changed," said ING  strategist Alessandro Giansanti in Amsterdam. "There has been a  change in trend in public finance policies. If the trend of  reduction in the deficit continues we cannot rule out that even  next year (Greece) can come back to the market."                  YEN, METALS YO-YO      Earlier in the day, Japan's Nikkei share index crept to a  5-1/2 year high. The yen shed some of Monday's gains  after Japan's economy minister said his comments the previous  day that the government was satisfied with the level of the  currency had been misinterpreted.       A recent downward slide in precious metals also resumed.  Gold was down 2.4 percent as the stronger dollar left it  facing its eighth fall in nine sessions. Silver dropped more  than 3 percent.      While low inflation prospects has dulled demand for  traditional hedge gold, silver has fallen out of favour with  investors recently as demand from the solar energy sector has  also sagged and mining of the metal has increased.      "The market was caught horribly short yesterday, so there  was some buying this morning. But the dollar started to get  stronger and gold didn't manage to break above $1,400, so sales  started again," Marex Spectron head trader David Govett said.  
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