Sunday, June 30, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar holds firm as markets eye Fed's departure from easy money

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Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX-Dollar holds firm as markets eye Fed's departure from easy money
Jul 1st 2013, 05:45

Mon Jul 1, 2013 1:45am EDT

* Dollar index near 4-week high

* Aussie dlr skids to three-year low, more losses seen

* Dollar/yen could test Ichimoku cloud top above Y101

* Focus on central banks' meetings this week, Friday's US jobs data

By Wayne Cole and Hideyuki Sano

SYDNEY/TOKYO, July 1 (Reuters) - The dollar was broadly firm on Monday as traders greeted the start of a new quarter that could see the U.S. Federal Reserve beginning to wind down its stimulus, even as other major central banks are expected to maintain their super-easy monetary policy.

The Australian dollar touched near three-year lows versus the U.S. dollar, though it managed to stage a modest comeback in the wake of a less dire-than-expected reading on China's manufacturing sector.

Friday's report on U.S. payrolls will be even more critical than usual as a upside surprise would only fan speculation about an early start to tapering by the Federal Reserve, likely lifting both Treasury yields and the dollar.

"This week will be huge for bond bears if the payrolls report validates the Fed's decision to lower its unemployment forecasts," noted analysts at JPMorgan.

Rising yields and an improving domestic economy give the U.S. currency a big advantage over the euro and yen where policy is expected to stay super-easy for a long time to come.

That is reflected in the dollar index which hit a four-week peak of 83.344 on Friday, having recovered all the way from a 80.498 trough in just eight sessions. The index was up a shade at 83.136 on Monday.

Against the yen, the dollar rose to a high of 99.55 yen , a level not seen in nearly four weeks, before giving up some the gains to trader at 99.38 yen, still up 0.2 percent from late New York on Friday.

"Technically, the dollar/yen seems firmly supported at the bottom of Ichimoku cloud and it looks like it could test the cloud top near 101.30 yen," said Bart Wakabayashi, head of forex at State Street Global Markets in Tokyo.

"The market will focus on the Fed's tapering of stimulus, unless there's a clear signal from the Fed that it will not be on the cards this year," he added.

Indeed, Fed Governor Jeremy Stein on Friday highlighted September as a possible time when the U.S. central bank will need to consider reducing its bond-buying programme.

Japanese economic news continued its better run with sentiment at big manufacturers improving markedly in the latest Bank of Japan survey. Notable was a big rise in business investment plans.

Yet these are just early days in the BOJ's massive quantitative easing campaign which is set to run for much of the next two years.

Against the euro, the dollar was on top at $1.3010 and angling to test resistance in the $1.2983/2990 area.

The European Central Bank and the Bank of England have policy meetings on Thursday and the former is likely to emphasise that the eurozone economy is in a much different stage of recovery than the United States.

"President Draghi is likely to use the press conference to "speak soft", said analysts at RBC Capital Markets.

"We expect the ECB to continue emphasising that extraordinary accommodative policies will continue, and that it has other options if looser monetary policy is needed."

Also holding a policy meeting this week is the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and, while it is widely expected to hold rates steady at 2.75 percent, analysts suspect it will welcome the recent decline in the local dollar while keeping a bias to ease further.

The Australian currency touched a three-year low of $0.9110 early Monday and traders assume it is only a matter of time before it tests 90 cents, though it has rebounded after China's manufacturing data turned out to be less dire than expected.

China's official purchasing managers' index (PMI) slipped to 50.1 in June from 50.8 in May, but was above the median forecast of 50.0. However, a separate private report painted a slightly gloomier picture of the sector.

"Chinese economic outlook is still uncertain, so Asian emerging market currencies and the Aussie will remain under pressure for the time being," said a trader at a Japanese bank.

The Aussie last stood at $0.9192, up 0.5 percent from late U.S. levels.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks slip on Fed policy worries, China PMIs

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks slip on Fed policy worries, China PMIs
Jul 1st 2013, 05:50

Mon Jul 1, 2013 1:50am EDT

* Asian stocks soft, following subdued Wall St

* European shares seen opening lower

* Worries about Fed exit plan back at fore after Fed official comments

* China HSBC June manufacturing PMI hits 9-mth low, official PMI slips

By Masayuki Kitano and Ian Chua

SINGAPORE/SYDNEY, July 1 (Reuters) - Asian equities edged lower on Monday, hurt by worries that the U.S. Federal Reserve could start scaling back its massive monetary stimulus in September, and signs of an economic slowdown in China.

European stocks were seen likely to fall on Monday. Financial spreadbetters expect Germany's DAX to open down 0.44 percent, and France's CAC 40 to open down 0.37 percent.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.3 percent, having last week posted a 2.8 percent rally, its biggest weekly gain since September 2012.

The index, however, had ended the first half of the year down 7.3 percent, as investors began to fret that the U.S. central bank might start tapering its massive bond-buying later this year and slow down flows into Asian assets.

"I don't think this corrective mode will end immediately," said Satoshi Okagawa, senior global markets analyst for Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation in Singapore.

Besides the growing speculation about a possible scaling back of the Fed's quantitative easing, worries about the Chinese economy's outlook may weigh on Asian equities in the near-term, Okagawa said.

China's factory activity reached its lowest in nine months in June as new orders fell despite price cuts by producers, a private survey showed on Monday, reinforcing signs of an economic slowdown in the second quarter.

The HSBC/Markit Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for June retreated to 48.2, the lowest level since September 2012 and down from May's final reading of 49.2.

A separate PMI survey released by China's government statistics office earlier on Monday slipped to 50.1 in June from 50.8 in May, but came in above the median market forecast of 50.0.

Tokyo's Nikkei share average rose 1.1 percent in choppy trade. Some long-only investors picked up banking shares, while currency-sensitive exporters were supported by a weaker yen.

Optimism that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's aggressive stimulus push will lift the economy has helped light a fire under the Nikkei, which is up about 33 percent so far this year.

Data on Monday suggested Abe's plans are on track with a survey showing the mood of Japanese manufacturers turning positive for the first time in nearly two years.

Monday's market moves followed a subdued finish on Wall Street after Fed Governor Jeremy Stein suggested that September could be an opportune time for the central bank to consider scaling back its massive asset-purchase programme.

Stein's remarks, echoed by President of the Richmond Fed, Jeffrey Lacker, undid some of the calm that spread through markets last week after several other officials sought to play down market fears of the Fed's plan to taper stimulus.

Critical for markets this week is the U.S. jobs data due on Friday, given it is a key measure for the Fed to consider before deciding to start withdrawing stimulus.

In currency markets, the dollar held near a one-month high against a basket of major currencies. The dollar index stood at 83.111, not far from Friday's high of 83.344, its highest level since early June.

Against the yen, the dollar hit a one-month high of 99.55 yen, and was last up 0.2 percent on the day at 99.39 yen.

The Australian dollar touched a near three-year low against the U.S. dollar earlier on Monday, but later regained a bit of ground, getting some support after China's official PMI was less dire than expected.

The Australian dollar rose 0.6 percent to $0.9193. Earlier, it fell to $0.9110, its lowest level since September 2010.

Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasuries fell about 6/32 in price to yield 2.512 percent. The 10-year yield rose 2 basis points on the day but remained below last Monday's high of 2.667 percent, which was the highest since August 2011.

Spot gold rose 1.1 percent to $1,246.31 per ounce, up from a near three-year trough of $1.180.71 set on Friday. Worries about the end of the Fed's stimulus had contributed to the panic selling of the precious metal.

U.S. crude held steady at $96.53 a barrel.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: RPT-GLOBAL ECONOMY-The Fed and China churn already choppy waters

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RPT-GLOBAL ECONOMY-The Fed and China churn already choppy waters
Jul 1st 2013, 05:00

Mon Jul 1, 2013 1:00am EDT

* Debate intensifies over timing of Fed tapering

* Worries over China slowdown unlikely to abate

* Japan needs structural reform to take up growth baton

By Alan Wheatley, Global Economics Correspondent

LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Data this week will add spice to speculation as to when the U.S. Federal Reserve will start scaling back its stimulus while reinforcing the realisation that China is serious about shifting to a less frantic growth rate.

Fed policy makers have sent mixed messages since Chairman Ben Bernanke's June 19 announcement that the central bank was on course to end its bond buying, now running at $85 billion a month, by mid-2014.

Several officials reassured markets last week that the phase-out of the central bank's asset purchases would depend on the economic data, not the date.

But Fed Governor Jeremy Stein on Friday explicitly mentioned September as perhaps the time to decide whether to start heading for the exit. He also stressed the need to take a long view of the improvement in the economy.

That being the case, a projected increase of 166,000 U.S. non-farm payroll jobs in June and a dip in the jobless rate to 7.5 percent could be enough to cement the case for an early tapering of the Fed's 'quantitative easing' (QE) programme.

But Brian Levitt, senior economist with OppenheimerFunds in New York, said the fact remained that U.S. growth was modest; given the pace of job creation, it could take a couple of years before unemployment approaches the 6.5 percent rate the Fed has tentatively set as the threshold for raising interest rates.

"It would be nice to see a few months in a row of over 200,000 jobs created before we start thinking about what an exit strategy for the Federal Reserve is going to look like, especially when you think that inflation by any measure is contained here in the United States," Levitt said.

CHINA SWITCHES GEARS

Like the jobs report, the U.S. Institute of Supply Management's June manufacturing survey will not be signalling a boom either: economists expect the index based on the survey to rise modestly to 50.5 from 49.0 in May.

At least the survey should point in a positive direction. By contrast, the index derived from China's official poll of purchasing managers is likely to have fallen to the neutral level of 50 demarcating expansion from contraction.

A slower, more sustainable rate of growth in China would be good news for the world in the long run, but it makes life harder in the interim for central banks trying to steer a course through strong cross-currents.

Poland and Romania are forecast to cut interest rates this week, but Australia, Sweden, Britain and the European Central Bank are likely to keep policy on hold.

With interest rates near zero, communicating expectations is an increasingly important policy tool for central banks. Mark Carney, the ex-Bank of Canada chief who takes over at the Bank of England on Monday, is a firm proponent of forward guidance.

In the same vein, ECB President Mario Draghi is expected to repeat his soothing message from last week that the bank is a long way from abandoning its ultra-loose stance because economic recovery will be gradual and fragile.

While some economists still expect the ECB to cut rates again later in the year, attention is turning to how the bank can halt a decline in bank lending so companies can benefit more from very low interest rates and pick up the pace of hiring.

Figures for May are likely to show euro zone unemployment at a record high of 12.3 percent.

"If he could do anything that would revive investment in the euro area, that would definitely help us internally and we would not need to depend so much on whether the Fed is going to end QE and what's happening to Chinese economic growth," said Bert Colijn, an economist in Brussels with the Conference Board, a business research group.

STRUCTURAL SHORTCOMINGS

Colijn is worried that a sustained rise in bond yields, touched off by anticipation of Fed 'tapering', could halt the improvement in euro zone confidence, which has recovered to a 12-month high.

Seen in another light, though, the recent rise in euro zone periphery yields is a timely reminder to the likes of Spain and Italy that the ECB's monetary generosity is merely buying time for them to make tough policy changes needed to revive growth.

"From the ECB's perspective, a bit of pressure on southern Europe's bond markets may be no bad thing if it acts as an incentive for governments to step up the pace of reform," said Nicholas Spiro with Spiro Sovereign Strategy, a London consultancy.

The trick of striking a balance between short-term stimulus and long-term reform is why the efforts of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to reverse two decades of stagnation and deflation in Japan - through the 'three arrows' of easy money, fiscal stimulus and structural reform - is attracting a lot of attention in Europe.

Andrew Milligan and Jeremy Lawson, economists at Standard Life in Edinburgh, say parts of the euro zone increasingly resemble Japan because of ageing populations and a lack of supply-side reforms. They worry in particular about Italy.

"While overall the West does not suffer from the scale of the difficulties that have plagued Japan, certain European countries, such as Italy, are much more vulnerable to going down the Japanese path than others," they wrote in a report.

Like Italy, Japan will return to sustainable growth only if the government rams through structural reforms. In the meantime, though, the sugar rush from a more-aggressive monetary policy is bolstering business confidence, as Monday's Bank of Japan 'tankan' survey is expected to show.

"With a weak currency providing continued tailwinds, the slowdown in the rest of Asia and uncertainties about Western growth have yet to dampen Japanese manufacturing optimism," said Izumi Devalier, an economist with HSBC in Hong Kong.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar holds firm as markets price-in Fed exit

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FOREX-Dollar holds firm as markets price-in Fed exit
Jul 1st 2013, 03:54

Sun Jun 30, 2013 11:54pm EDT

* Dollar index near 4-week high

* Aussie dlr skids to three-year low, more losses seen

* Dollar/yen could test Ichimoku cloud top above Y101

* Focus on central banks' meetings this week, Friday's US job data

By Wayne Cole and Hideyuki Sano

SYDNEY/TOKYO, July 1 (Reuters) - The dollar was broadly firm on Monday as traders greeted the start of a new quarter that could see the U.S. Federal Reserve beginning to wind down its stimulus as early as September, even as other major central banks are expected to maintain their super-easy monetary policy.

The Australian dollar touched near three-year lows versus the U.S. dollar, though it managed to stage a modest comeback in the wake of a less dire-than-expected reading on China's manufacturing sector.

Friday's report on U.S. payrolls will be even more critical than usual as a upside surprise would only fan speculation about an early start to tapering by the Federal Reserve, likely lifting both Treasury yields and the dollar.

"This week will be huge for bond bears if the payrolls report validates the Fed's decision to lower its unemployment forecasts," noted analysts at JPMorgan.

Rising yields and an improving domestic economy give the U.S. currency a big advantage over the euro and yen where policy is expected to stay super-easy for a long time to come.

That is reflected in the dollar index which hit a four-week peak of 83.344 on Friday, having recovered all the way from a 80.498 trough in just eight sessions. The index was up a shade at 83.136 on Monday.

Against the yen, the dollar rose to a high of 99.55 yen , a level not seen in nearly four weeks, before giving up some the gains to trader at 99.26 yen, up 0.1 percent from late New York on Friday.

"Technically, the dollar/yen seems firmly supported at the bottom of Ichimoku cloud and it looks like it could test the cloud top near 101.30 yen," said Bart Wakabayashi, head of forex at State Street Global Markets in Tokyo.

"The market will focus on the Fed's tapering of stimulus, unless there's a clear signal from the Fed that it will not be on the cards this year," he added.

Indeed, Fed Governor Jeremy Stein on Friday highlighted September as a possible time when the U.S. central bank will need to consider reducing its bond-buying programme.

Japanese economic news continued its better run with sentiment at big manufacturers improving markedly in the latest Bank of Japan survey. Notable was a big rise in business investment plans.

Yet these are just early days in the BOJ's massive quantitative easing campaign which is set to run for much of the next two years.

Against the euro, the dollar was on top at $1.3010 and angling to test resistance in the $1.2983/2990 area.

The European Central Bank and the Bank of England have policy meetings on Thursday and the former is likely to emphasise that the eurozone economy is in a much different stage of recovery than the United States.

"President Draghi is likely to use the press conference to "speak soft", said analysts at RBC Capital Markets.

"We expect the ECB to continue emphasising that extraordinary accommodative policies will continue, and that it has other options if looser monetary policy is needed."

Also holding a policy meeting this week is the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and, while it is widely expected to hold rates steady at 2.75 percent, analysts suspect it will welcome the recent decline in the local dollar while keeping a bias to ease further.

The Australian currency touched a three-year low of $0.9110 early Monday and traders assume it is only a matter of time before it tests 90 cents, though it has rebounded after China's manufacturing data turned out to be less dire than expected.

China's official purchasing managers' index (PMI) slipped to 50.1 in June from 50.8 in May, but was above the median forecast of 50.0. However, a separate private report painted a slightly gloomier picture of the sector.

"Chinese economic outlook is still uncertain, so Asian emerging market currencies and the Aussie will remain under pressure for the time being," said a trader at a Japanese bank.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks sag on Fed policy worries, China PMIs

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks sag on Fed policy worries, China PMIs
Jul 1st 2013, 03:11

Sun Jun 30, 2013 11:11pm EDT

* Asian stocks soft, following subdued Wall St

* Worries about Fed exit plan back at fore after Fed official comments

* China HSBC June manufacturing PMI hits 9-mth low, official PMI slips

By Masayuki Kitano and Ian Chua

SINGAPORE/SYDNEY, July 1 (Reuters) - Asian equities edged lower on Monday, hurt by worries that the U.S. Federal Reserve could start scaling back its massive monetary stimulus in September and signs of an economic slowdown in China.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.5 percent, having last week posted a 2.8 percent rally, its biggest weekly gain since September 2012. The index, though, ended the first half of the year down 7.3 percent.

The MSCI index has retreated since hitting a 21-month high in early May, as investors began to fret that the U.S. central bank might start tapering its massive bond-buying later this year and lead to a slowdown in inflows into Asian assets.

"I don't think this corrective mode will end immediately," said Satoshi Okagawa, senior global markets analyst for Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation in Singapore.

Besides the growing speculation about a possible scaling back of the Fed's quantitative easing, worries about Chinese economy's outlook may weigh on Asian equities in the near-term, Okagawa said.

China's factory activity reached its lowest in nine months in June as new orders fell despite price cuts by producers, a private survey showed on Monday, reinforcing signs of an economic slowdown in the second quarter.

The HSBC/Markit Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for June retreated to 48.2, the lowest level since September 2012 and down from May's final reading of 49.2.

A separate PMI survey released by China's government statistics office earlier on Monday was less dour. Its index slipped to 50.1 in June from 50.8 in May, but came in above the median market forecast of 50.0.

Tokyo's Nikkei share average slipped 0.5 percent, after having climbed 3.4 percent last week. The Nikkei, however, is still up more than 30 percent since the end of last year.

Optimism that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's aggressive stimulus push will lift the economy has helped light a fire under the Nikkei.

Data on Monday suggested Abe's plans are on track with a survey showing the mood of Japanese manufacturers turning positive for the first time in nearly two years.

Monday's market moves followed a subdued finish on Wall Street after Fed Governor Jeremy Stein suggested that September could be an opportune time for the central bank to consider scaling back its massive asset-purchase programme.

Stein's remarks, echoed by President of the Richmond Fed, Jeffrey Lacker, undid some of the calm that spread through markets last week after several other officials sought to play down market fears of the Fed's plan to taper stimulus.

Critical for markets this week is the U.S. jobs data due on Friday, given it is a key measures the Fed will consider before deciding to start withdrawing stimulus.

In currency markets, the dollar held near a one-month high against a basket of major currencies. The dollar index stood at 83.157, not far from Friday's high of 83.344, its highest level since early June.

Against the yen, the dollar hit a one-month high of 99.55 yen, and was last up 0.2 percent on the day at 99.31 yen.

The Australian dollar touched a near three-year low against the U.S. dollar earlier on Monday, but later regained a bit of ground, getting some support after China's official PMI was less dire than expected.

The Australian dollar rose 0.4 percent to $0.9172. Earlier, it fell to $0.9110, its lowest level since September 2010.

Spot gold was up around 0.5 percent at $1,239.31 per ounce, still not far off a near three-year trough of $1.180.71 plumbed on Friday. Worries about the end of the Fed's stimulus had contributed to the panic selling of the precious metal.

U.S. crude fell 0.4 percent at $96.16 a barrel.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: TABLE-Foreign brokers set to buy Japanese stocks

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TABLE-Foreign brokers set to buy Japanese stocks
Jun 30th 2013, 23:30

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: Japan big manufacturers' mood turns positive -BOJ tankan

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Japan big manufacturers' mood turns positive -BOJ tankan
Jun 30th 2013, 23:59

TOKYO, July 1 | Sun Jun 30, 2013 7:59pm EDT

TOKYO, July 1 (Reuters) - Big Japanese manufacturers' mood turned positive in April-June for the first time in nearly two years, the Bank of Japan's closely watched "tankan" survey showed, a sign the government's reflationary policies continue to boost business morale despite recent market turbulence.

The headline index for big manufacturers' sentiment was plus 4 in June, compared with minus 8 in March and the median market forecast for plus 3, the quarterly tankan survey showed on Monday. It was the first positive reading, meaning that optimists outnumbered pessimists, since the September 2011 survey.

Big manufacturers expect conditions to improve over the next three months, with the index for September seen at plus 10, against plus 7 seen by economists in a Reuters poll.

The survey also showed big firms plan to raise their capital spending by 5.5 percent in the financial year that started on April 1, compared with a median forecast for a 2.9 percent increase.

The sentiment indexes are derived by subtracting the percentage of respondents who say conditions are poor from those who say they are good. A positive reading means optimists outnumber pessimists.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: UPDATE 1-Japan big manufacturers' mood turns positive-BOJ tankan

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UPDATE 1-Japan big manufacturers' mood turns positive-BOJ tankan
Jun 30th 2013, 23:59

Sun Jun 30, 2013 7:59pm EDT

* Big manufacturers' sentiment DI +4 vs -8 in March

* Big non-manufacturers' mood also improves - tankan

* Big firms project 5.5 pct rise in FY2013/14 capex

By Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto

TOKYO, July 1 (Reuters) - Japanese manufacturers' sentiment turned positive in the three months to June for the first time in nearly two years, a closely-watched central bank survey showed, a sign the recent market turbulence has yet to hurt the feel-good mood created by the government's reflationary policies.

The headline index for big manufacturers' sentiment improved 12 points from three months ago to plus 4, slightly better than a median market forecast of plus 3, the Bank of Japan's quarterly "tankan" survey showed on Monday.

That was the second straight quarter of improvement and the first positive reading - which means optimists outnumbered pessimists - since the survey of September 2011, a vindication of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's "Abenomics" policy of aggressive monetary stimulus and fiscal spending.

Service-sector sentiment also brightened as consumers spent more, with the index for big non-manufacturing companies rising 6 points to plus 12, the tankan showed. That compared with a median market forecast of plus 11.

The outcome bodes well for the central bank, keen to end grinding deflation that has haunted Japan for 15 years and achieve its 2 percent inflation target in roughly two years through aggressive monetary stimulus.

Big manufacturers expect business conditions to improve further three months ahead, suggesting they see the negative effect of recent market turbulence on the economy as limited - at least for now.

The survey was compiled amid acute volatility that drove up bond yields and wiped out the gains in Tokyo shares made on investors' big hopes for Abe's stimulus plans.

But big firms plan to increase capital expenditure by 5.5 percent in the current business year from April, more than a median market forecast of a 2.9 percent rise, a sign the positive mood may be prompting them to expand business operations.

Financial markets have rallied strongly since Abe first highlighted his brand of aggressive policymaking late last year. They got a further boost in April, when the BOJ unleashed an intense burst of stimulus by pledging to double the supply of money in two years.

But the positive market sentiment turned around in late May when the BOJ's huge asset purchases disrupted the bond market and drove up yields which, coupled with expectations of the U.S. Federal Reserve's tapering of monetary stimulus, hit global stocks and triggered a rebound in the safe-haven yen.

Still, the tankan, a key touchstone for BOJ policymakers, reinforced the view that Japan's economy remains on track for a steady recovery backed by a pickup in exports and private consumption.

Many analysts expect the BOJ to keep monetary policy steady at its next policy-setting meeting next week.

The tankan's sentiment indexes are derived by subtracting the percentage of respondents who say conditions are poor from those who say they are good.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks soggy as Fed tapering worries linger, China eyed

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks soggy as Fed tapering worries linger, China eyed
Jul 1st 2013, 00:41

Sun Jun 30, 2013 8:41pm EDT

* Asian stocks soft, following subdued Wall St

* Worries about Fed exit plan back at fore after Fed official comments

* China manufacturing data next in focus

By Ian Chua

SYDNEY, July 1 (Reuters) - Asian stocks got off to an uninspired start on Monday, while the U.S. dollar held firm at one-month highs after an influential Federal Reserve official suggested September could be the beginning of the end of easy money from the central bank.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.3 percent, having last week posted a 2.8 percent rally, its biggest weekly gain since September 2012. The index, though, ended the first half of the year down 7.3 percent.

Tokyo's Nikkei also slipped 0.1 percent, having climbed 3.5 percent last week to end the first half up a handsome 31.5 percent.

"We had a big rebound in the Nikkei last Friday, so we may see some profit-taking. I think there was some window dressing last Friday as it was month-end and quarter-end," said Takashi Hiroki, chief strategist at Monex Inc.

Optimism that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's aggressive stimulus push will lift the economy has helped light a fire under the Nikkei.

Data on Monday suggested Abe's plans are on track with a survey showing the mood of Japanese manufacturers turning positive for the first time in nearly two years.

Monday's market moves followed a subdued finish on Wall Street after Fed Governor Jeremy Stein suggested that September could be an opportune time for the central bank to consider scaling back its massive asset-purchase programme.

Stein's remarks, aechoed by President of the Richmond Fed, Jeffrey Lacker, undid some of the calm that spread through markets last week after several other officials sought to play down market fears of the Fed's plan to taper stimulus.

Critical for markets this week is the U.S. jobs data due on Friday, given it is a key measures the Fed will consider before deciding to start withdrawing stimulus.

In the meantime, markets will take their cue from a report on China's vast manufacturing sector due around 0100 GMT.

Any disappointment will no doubt renew worries about the world's second biggest economy just as markets are getting over the impact of a recent credit crunch.

In currency markets, investors reacted to Stein's comments by bidding up the U.S. dollar, which hit a one-month high against a basket of major currencies. It remained near the peak early on Monday.

The euro traded at $1.3016, having slipped 0.2 percent on Friday, while the greenback reached fresh one-month highs of 94.55 yen.

Among the biggest losers was the Australian dollar, which hit a fresh 33-month low of $0.9110, following Friday's 1.5 percent drop.

Partly weighing on the Aussie was a recent dramatic selloff in gold, a major export earner for Australia. While bullion jumped more than 2 percent on Friday, it still suffered its biggest quarterly drop in 45 years.

Spot gold was up around 0.5 percent at $1,239 per ounce in early trade, still not far off a near three-year trough of $1.180.71 plumbed on Friday. Worries about the end of the Fed's stimulus had contributed to the panic selling of the precious metal.

Other commodities got off to a sleepy start with U.S. crude down 0.4 percent at $96.22 a barrel, while copper edged up 0.2 percent to $6,766 a tonne.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: UPDATE 2-Japan big manufacturers' mood turns positive-BOJ tankan

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UPDATE 2-Japan big manufacturers' mood turns positive-BOJ tankan
Jul 1st 2013, 00:45

Sun Jun 30, 2013 8:45pm EDT

  * Big manufacturers' sentiment DI +4 vs -8 in March      * Big non-manufacturers' mood also improves - tankan      * Big firms project 5.5 pct rise in FY2013/14 capex      * Yen weakness helps boost sentiment - analysts      * BOJ seen standing pat, may revise economic assessment          By Leika Kihara and Tetsushi Kajimoto      TOKYO, July 1 (Reuters) - Japanese manufacturers' sentiment  turned positive in the three months to June for the first time  in nearly two years, a closely-watched central bank survey  showed, a sign the recent market turbulence has yet to hurt the  feel-good mood created by the government's reflationary  policies.      Robust private consumption also lifted service-sector  sentiment, boding well for the Bank of Japan's plan to end 15  years of grinding deflation and achieve its 2 percent inflation  target in two years through aggressive monetary stimulus.      The headline index for big manufacturers' sentiment improved  12 points from three months ago to plus 4, slightly better than  a median market forecast of plus 3 and the highest level since  March 2011, the BOJ's quarterly "tankan" survey showed on  Monday.      That was the second straight quarter of improvement and the  first positive reading - which means optimists outnumbered  pessimists - since the survey of September 2011, a vindication  of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's "Abenomics" policy of aggressive  monetary stimulus and fiscal spending.      Service-sector sentiment also brightened with the index for  big non-manufacturing companies rising 6 points to plus 12, a  tad higher than a median market forecast of plus 11.      The upbeat results heighten the chance the central bank will  hold off on additional monetary easing in coming months and  consider revising up its assessment of the economy at next  week's rate review, analysts say.      "The improvement in big firms' sentiment was largely driven  by yen weakness, which supported exports, and the recovering  economy overall," said Taro Saito, senior economist at NLI  Research Institute in Tokyo.      "The BOJ probably doesn't need to act immediately."                    CAPEX PLAN UPBEAT      The survey was compiled amid acute volatility that drove up  bond yields and wiped out the gains in Tokyo shares made on  investors' big hopes for Abe's stimulus plans.      But big manufacturers expect business conditions to improve  further three months ahead, suggesting they see the negative  effect of recent market turbulence on the economy as limited -  at least for now.      Big firms plan to increase capital expenditure by 5.5  percent in the current business year from April, more than a  median market forecast of a 2.9 percent increase, suggesting the  positive mood is finally prompting companies - long hesitant to  spend due to the murky economic outlook - to expand operations.      If so, it would be a welcome development for Abenomics,  which relies on the psychological impact of its policies to  encourage households and companies to spend more.      The yen's drop against the dollar played a large part in  brightening sentiment among Japan's automakers and electronic  giants. Big manufacturers now expect the dollar to average 91.20  yen in the current year from April, much higher than the 85.22  yen projected three months ago.      The new projection is still lower than current dollar/yen  levels of around 99 yen, suggesting that exporters will enjoy  further gains in profits if exchange-rates stay not far from  recent levels.      Financial markets have rallied strongly since Abe first  highlighted his brand of aggressive policymaking late last year.  They got a further boost in April, when the BOJ unleashed an  intense burst of stimulus by pledging to double the supply of  money in two years.      But the positive market sentiment turned around in late May  when the BOJ's huge asset purchases disrupted the bond market  and drove up yields which, coupled with expectations of the U.S.  Federal Reserve's tapering of monetary stimulus, hit global  stocks and triggered a rebound in the safe-haven yen.      Still, the tankan, a key touchstone for BOJ policymakers,  reinforced the view that Japan's economy remains on track for a  steady recovery backed by a pickup in exports and private  consumption.      The tankan's sentiment indexes are derived by subtracting  the percentage of respondents who say conditions are poor from  those who say they are good. Nearly 70 percent of the companies  that replied did so by June 11, the central bank said.  
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Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL ECONOMY-The Fed and China churn already choppy waters

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GLOBAL ECONOMY-The Fed and China churn already choppy waters
Jun 30th 2013, 18:00

Sun Jun 30, 2013 2:00pm EDT

* Debate intensifies over timing of Fed tapering

* Worries over China slowdown unlikely to abate

* Japan needs structural reform to take up growth baton

By Alan Wheatley, Global Economics Correspondent

LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Data this week will add spice to speculation as to when the U.S. Federal Reserve will start scaling back its stimulus while reinforcing the realisation that China is serious about shifting to a less frantic growth rate.

Fed policy makers have sent mixed messages since Chairman Ben Bernanke's June 19 announcement that the central bank was on course to end its bond buying, now running at $85 billion a month, by mid-2014.

Several officials reassured markets last week that the phase-out of the central bank's asset purchases would depend on the economic data, not the date.

But Fed Governor Jeremy Stein on Friday explicitly mentioned September as perhaps the time to decide whether to start heading for the exit. He also stressed the need to take a long view of the improvement in the economy.

That being the case, a projected increase of 166,000 U.S. non-farm payroll jobs in June and a dip in the jobless rate to 7.5 percent could be enough to cement the case for an early tapering of the Fed's 'quantitative easing' (QE) programme.

But Brian Levitt, senior economist with OppenheimerFunds in New York, said the fact remained that U.S. growth was modest; given the pace of job creation, it could take a couple of years before unemployment approaches the 6.5 percent rate the Fed has tentatively set as the threshold for raising interest rates.

"It would be nice to see a few months in a row of over 200,000 jobs created before we start thinking about what an exit strategy for the Federal Reserve is going to look like, especially when you think that inflation by any measure is contained here in the United States," Levitt said.

CHINA SWITCHES GEARS

Like the jobs report, the U.S. Institute of Supply Management's June manufacturing survey will not be signalling a boom either: economists expect the index based on the survey to rise modestly to 50.5 from 49.0 in May.

At least the survey should point in a positive direction. By contrast, the index derived from China's official poll of purchasing managers is likely to have fallen to the neutral level of 50 demarcating expansion from contraction.

A slower, more sustainable rate of growth in China would be good news for the world in the long run, but it makes life harder in the interim for central banks trying to steer a course through strong cross-currents.

Poland and Romania are forecast to cut interest rates this week, but Australia, Sweden, Britain and the European Central Bank are likely to keep policy on hold.

With interest rates near zero, communicating expectations is an increasingly important policy tool for central banks. Mark Carney, the ex-Bank of Canada chief who takes over at the Bank of England on Monday, is a firm proponent of forward guidance.

In the same vein, ECB President Mario Draghi is expected to repeat his soothing message from last week that the bank is a long way from abandoning its ultra-loose stance because economic recovery will be gradual and fragile.

While some economists still expect the ECB to cut rates again later in the year, attention is turning to how the bank can halt a decline in bank lending so companies can benefit more from very low interest rates and pick up the pace of hiring.

Figures for May are likely to show euro zone unemployment at a record high of 12.3 percent.

"If he could do anything that would revive investment in the euro area, that would definitely help us internally and we would not need to depend so much on whether the Fed is going to end QE and what's happening to Chinese economic growth," said Bert Colijn, an economist in Brussels with the Conference Board, a business research group.

STRUCTURAL SHORTCOMINGS

Colijn is worried that a sustained rise in bond yields, touched off by anticipation of Fed 'tapering', could halt the improvement in euro zone confidence, which has recovered to a 12-month high.

Seen in another light, though, the recent rise in euro zone periphery yields is a timely reminder to the likes of Spain and Italy that the ECB's monetary generosity is merely buying time for them to make tough policy changes needed to revive growth.

"From the ECB's perspective, a bit of pressure on southern Europe's bond markets may be no bad thing if it acts as an incentive for governments to step up the pace of reform," said Nicholas Spiro with Spiro Sovereign Strategy, a London consultancy.

The trick of striking a balance between short-term stimulus and long-term reform is why the efforts of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to reverse two decades of stagnation and deflation in Japan - through the 'three arrows' of easy money, fiscal stimulus and structural reform - is attracting a lot of attention in Europe.

Andrew Milligan and Jeremy Lawson, economists at Standard Life in Edinburgh, say parts of the euro zone increasingly resemble Japan because of ageing populations and a lack of supply-side reforms. They worry in particular about Italy.

"While overall the West does not suffer from the scale of the difficulties that have plagued Japan, certain European countries, such as Italy, are much more vulnerable to going down the Japanese path than others," they wrote in a report.

Like Italy, Japan will return to sustainable growth only if the government rams through structural reforms. In the meantime, though, the sugar rush from a more-aggressive monetary policy is bolstering business confidence, as Monday's Bank of Japan 'tankan' survey is expected to show.

"With a weak currency providing continued tailwinds, the slowdown in the rest of Asia and uncertainties about Western growth have yet to dampen Japanese manufacturing optimism," said Izumi Devalier, an economist with HSBC in Hong Kong.

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