Thursday, May 2, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks up on ECB cut, but euro slumps after Draghi

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks up on ECB cut, but euro slumps after Draghi
May 2nd 2013, 14:34

Thu May 2, 2013 10:34am EDT

  * ECB cuts rates 25 bps as to all-time low      * Euro tumbles as ECB suggests open to negative deposit  rates      * Oil rises above $100 after ECB rate cut      * Bond prices weaken on news U.S. jobless claims fall          By Herbert Lash      LONDON/NEW YORK May 2 (Reuters) - The euro slumped against  the dollar on the prospect of negative deposit rates after the  European Central Bank cut interest rates to an all-time low on  Thursday, a move that along with U.S. economic data lifted Wall  Street stocks.      The ECB lowered its main rate by a quarter percentage point  to 0.50 percent, its first cut in 10 months, and pledged as much  liquidity as euro zone banks need well into next year.         The cut was widely expected after ECB President Mario Draghi  said last month that the bank stood ready to act. But the euro  fell after Draghi said the central bank is technically ready for   negative deposit rates.       The euro slid as low as $1.3062, according to Reuters  data, and was last at $1.3085, down 0.7 percent on the day.      If negative deposit rates were adopted, euro zone banks  would have to pay to deposit money at the central bank, giving  them an incentive to lend money rather than hoard it.      Equities rose on the view the world's biggest central banks,  including the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan, are trying  to encourage economic growth through bond-buying programs that  have pushed interest rates to historic lows.      "You've got the Fed still in stimulus mode and Japan  surprising markets with the size of their latest stimulus  package. Now you have the ECB cutting rates," said Todd  Salamone, director of research at Schaeffer's Investment  Research in Cincinnati.      "It all adds to the theme that global central banks are in a  stimulus mode and that is positive for equities," Salamone said.      The Dow Jones industrial average was up 50.89 points,  or 0.35 percent, at 14,751.84. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index   was up 6.17 points, or 0.39 percent, at 1,588.87. The  Nasdaq Composite Index was up 17.87 points, or 0.54  percent, at 3,316.99.      Stocks also rose on news the number of Americans filing new  claims for jobless benefits fell sharply last week to its lowest  level since the early days of the 2007-09 recession, suggesting  the job market is still healing despite a still weak economy.         Other data showed a narrowing of the U.S. trade deficit in  March, although drops in imports and exports provided a warning  about the strength of domestic and foreign demand.       Leading European shares, as measured by the FTSEurofirst 300  index, clawed back into positive territory after having  spent most of the morning in the red. The index was up 0.1   percent at 1202.72.      MSCI's all-country world index also pared  losses and was flat.      U.S. Treasuries prices weakened further on news of the U.S.  jobless claims, with the benchmark 10-year note falling 3/32 in  price to yield 1.6408 percent.      Oil rose above $100 a barrel as some investors saw this  week's price slide as overdone, although ample supply and  concerns about the outlook for demand due to shaky economic  growth limited the rally.      Brent crude rose 62 cents to $100.57 a barrel after  trading as low as $99.51. U.S crude was 68 cents higher  at $91.71 a barrel.  
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