Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-China trade data push shares to 5-yr highs

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-China trade data push shares to 5-yr highs
May 8th 2013, 08:16

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Wed May 8, 2013 4:16am EDT

  * MSCI world index, FTSEurofirst 300 hit five-year peaks      * China reports stronger-than-forecast April trade data      * Euro rises, Australian dollar rebounds      * Oil, copper climb        By Marc Jones      LONDON, May 8 (Reuters) - Strong Chinese trade data pushed  world shares to five-year highs on Wednesday and boosted  growth-sensitive currencies and commodities, despite doubts  about the quality of the figures.      Last Friday's upbeat U.S. jobs data and this week's robust  German industrial orders have driven up world stock markets, and  the positive mood was cemented on Wednesday as China followed  suit with the better-than-expected trade performance.       Exports and imports in the world's number two economy were   up 14.7 and 16.8 percent respectively in April. However,  economists believe that manoeuvring by exporters and speculative  capital inflows are masking weakness in real global  demand.       "I have no strong conviction whether the data reflects  reality," said Zhiwei Zhang, chief China economist at Nomura in  Hong Kong.      The equity market rally showed no sign of letting up as huge  injections of liquidity from leading central banks to boost  their economies outweighed the doubts about the Chinese data.      MSCI's world index, which tracks stocks in  45 countries, rose 0.3 percent to a five-year high as top  European shares followed their Asian counterparts.      The FTSEurofirst 300, which reached its own  five-year peak on Tuesday, opened up 0.3 percent as London's  FTSE 100, Paris's CAC-40 and Frankfurt's DAX   climbed 0.1 to 0.3 percent.      "If you look at the (Chinese) data there is a pick-up but  overall we are seeing a downtrend," said Daiwa Securities  economist Tobias Blattner. "There isn't too much good news, but  what we do know is that central banks are continuing to pump out  stimulus."      In the currency market, the euro was up 0.25 percent  on the day at $1.31, while the Australian dollar   reached its intraday high of $1.0194 after the data from China,  its biggest export market.      Copper and oil, two of the most sensitive commodities to  global growth prospects, also climbed. Copper rose more than 1  percent to a new three-week high of $7,350 a tonne and Brent  crude headed back towards $105 a barrel.      European bond markets saw a steady start to the day.  Benchmark Bunds were little changed and were expected to rebound  with investors set to snap up five-year German debt at an  auction later after a recent sell-off.       Investors were also awaiting German industrial output  numbers at 1000 GMT. Recent data have painted a mixed picture of  the euro zone's largest economy as investors try to gauge the  European Central Bank's next interest rate move.  
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