Thursday, June 27, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, gold steady as Fed, China fears ease

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, gold steady as Fed, China fears ease
Jun 27th 2013, 10:22

Thu Jun 27, 2013 6:22am EDT

  * Fears of Fed stimulus withdrawal, China credit crunch ease      * Precious metals rebound, oil extends gains      * European shares steady after 3.2 percent bounce      * Euro edges off three-week low, mixed data        By Marc Jones      LONDON, June 27 (Reuters) - World shares and bonds  stabilised on Thursday while gold and the euro recovered  slightly, after data suggested the U.S. Federal Reserve may  leave its stimulus programme in place a bit longer than markets  have been thinking.      The market tone improved overnight after a surprisingly  sharp downward revision to first-quarter U.S. economic growth,  which calmed fears the Fed would soon wind down the huge  bond-buying scheme that has underpinned investors' risk  appetite.          European shares saw their first session of relative  quiet in a week. They consolidated the 3.2 percent recovery they  have enjoyed over the last two days after last week's 11 percent  dive in response to the Fed's signal on cutting stimulus.      A 0.4 percent rise on London's FTSE 100 outshone  broadly flat markets in Paris and Frankfurt,  and left Asia's earlier rises as the main driver for the third  day of gains for MSCI's world share index.      "Whenever there is good news out of the U.S. it will cause  selling because people see it as a confirmation for Fed  tapering, while if we have something more disappointing like  yesterday people will say, 'Well OK, it won't happen yet'," said  Tobias Blattner, an economist at Daiwa Securities.      "That, unfortunately, is the kind of volatility that is  going to continue for the next couple of months."      With the rise in benchmark 10-year U.S. government debt  appearing to have come to a halt at around 2.4 percent, euro  zone bonds from Germany to Greece were able to claw back some of  the ground they have lost during the recent global selloff.          Reflecting the rise in yields generally over the last few  weeks, Italy paid its highest rate since March at a 5 billion  euro auction of 10- and 5- year debt, but healthy demand at the  sale meant there was little to unnerve markets.                HAMMERED METALS       After the drama of recent days, there was some respite for  precious metals although analysts expected it to be temporary.       Spot gold rose 1 percent to $1,235 an ounce, after a  4 percent fall on Wednesday that took the metal to $1,221.80,  its lowest since August 2010. Silver, which sank 5.5  percent in the previous session, gained about 2 percent.      In a note to clients, analysts at ABN Amro lowered their  end-of-year forecast for gold $200 to $1,100 and said this  year's 25 percent drop in gold and near 40 percent plunge in  silver prices showed "investors are losing faith in precious  metals".      The easing concerns about a pullback in U.S. stimulus helped  oil climb above $102 while in the currency market, mixed  euro zone data saw the euro wobble, leaving it at  $1.3014, having earlier pulled away from a three-week low  against the dollar.      ECB policymakers have been out in force in recent days  saying that unlike the Fed, they remain ready to cut rates if  needed.      Data from the central bank on Thursday explained some of  those concerns. Lending to euro zone firms contracted further in  May as the bloc's long-running recession continued to sap  appetite for investment and spending.       But at the same time there was a small pick-up in this  month's European Commission consumer and business confidence  survey, Germany saw unemployment ease while a data revision  meant euro zone neighbour Britain did not suffer a recent  "double-dip" recession after all.  
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