Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-World shares near 5-yr high on growth optimism

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-World shares near 5-yr high on growth optimism
May 7th 2013, 08:02

Tue May 7, 2013 4:02am EDT

  * MSCI world share index at highest since June 2008      * European shares edge up, euro subdued on ECB rate cut  suggestions      * Reserve Bank of Australian cuts interest rates to record  low      * Aussie dollar falls, stocks trim earlier losses on RBA  decision        By Marc Jones      LONDON, May 7 (Reuters) - World shares hit their highest  level in almost five years on Tuesday as last week's strong U.S.  jobs report continued to fuel optimism about the health of the  global economy.      Japanese stocks jumped in a delayed reaction to the data  because Tokyo had been closed for a public holiday on Monday.      The head of the European Central Bank added to the positive  mood by saying it was ready to cut rates again if needed.      Australia's central bank also did its bit to help the  economy, cutting rates to a record low on Tuesday and signalling  it could do more, helping shares.       "I think the markets are going to continue going higher, the  S&P hit another record high yesterday, the DAX is getting  closer," said Neil Marsh, strategist at Newedge.       "From a very low base, everyone is fairly optimistic that  things are going to improve and if they don't, you've got the  added backdrop from (ECB President Mario) Draghi that he'll do  whatever it takes to push the euro zone economy forwards."       The Nikkei stock average soared 3.7 percent and the  MSCI global index, which tracks stocks in 45  countries, rose 0.3 percent, both the highest since June 2008.      European equities also nudged up as trading gathered  momentum, bolstered by a crop of better than expected corporate  earnings and with the German DAX index closing in on  its own record high of 8,151,57 set back in 2007.      Monday's comments from Draghi that the ECB would cut rates  again if needed, including pushing its key deposit rate into  negative territory, kept downward pressure on the euro as  it hovered little changed on the day at $1.3075.      The prospect of negative euro zone rates continued to  underpin the bloc's bond markets too with the benchmark German  Bund a tick lower on the day at 146.15.            The main focus for Asian currency markets was the Reserve  Bank of Australia's policy meeting, at which the bank decided to  lower its cash rate by 25 basis points to a record low 2.75  percent.       Markets had priced in a 50-50 chance of a rate cut, and the  decision sent the Australian dollar down to a two-month  low of $1.0810 and helped Australian shares trim earlier losses.      Investors are now waiting for a batch of April data from  China, the world's second-largest economy, for more clues on  global growth. Chinese trade data will be released on Wednesday,  inflation on Thursday and money supply and loan growth expected  from Friday.  
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