Monday, July 22, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks near 5-year high on Japan elections; yen jumps

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks near 5-year high on Japan elections; yen jumps
Jul 22nd 2013, 19:42

Mon Jul 22, 2013 3:42pm EDT

  * Wall Street shares edge up, S&P hovers near record high      * Disappointing results from McDonald's weigh on sentiment      * Yen strengthens vs dollar, euro in choppy trading      * Gold posts biggest rise in over a year on weaker dollar          By Richard Leong      NEW YORK, July 22 (Reuters) - World stock prices rose to  near five-year highs on Monday on growing investor optimism  after Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe strengthened his power  base, adding weight to his plans to jumpstart the world's  third-biggest economy.      Investors' mood was also helped by a pledge from the Group  of 20 on Saturday to put growth before austerity, seeking to  revive a global economy that the bloc described as "too weak."         The yen rebounded after an initial dip in Tokyo, but many  traders viewed the bounce as temporary in view of Abe's upper  house election win on Sunday.       Riskier assets, including peripheral euro zone bonds, got a  boost after Portugal's president moved to keep the country's  coalition government intact, patching over recent troubles.         However, disappointing earnings from McDonald's   mitigated the upbeat mood for equities as the U.S. fast-food  giant posted weaker-than-expected results.       "McDonald's (earnings) headlines were a little weak, but I  think we are still in the strong start of the earnings season,"  said Ryan Detrick, senior technical strategist at Schaeffer's  Investment Research in Cincinnati, Ohio.      Data showing a surprise drop in U.S. existing-home sales in  June also tempered the initial buying of equities and other  risky assets.      "The risk is the macro backdrop doesn't come through quite  as strong as some of the companies are looking at, and that  could be a negative factor for them," said Investec economist  Victoria Clarke in London.      MSCI's world index, which tracks stocks in  45 countries, gained 0.43 percent to 375.47, helped by a 0.47  percent rise in Tokyo's Nikkei index. It was about 7  points below a five-year high set in late May.           In late afternoon trading, the Dow Jones industrial average   was up 7.72 points, or 0.05 percent, at 15,551.46. The  Standard & Poor's 500 Index was up 3.46 points, or 0.20  percent, at 1,695.55. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up  11.89 points, or 0.33 percent, at 3,599.51.       Both the S&P 500 and the Dow hit all-time highs last week  following a moderate pullback of fears that the Federal Reserve  might reduce its bond-purchase stimulus later this year if the  economy improves further.       In Europe, upbeat results from Dutch electronics maker  Philips and Swiss banks UBS and Julius Baer   boosted European share prices, but early gains were  pared as profit-taking emerged.       The pan-European FTSEurofirst 00 index ended 0.14  percent higher at 1,210.70, adding to its month-to-date gain of  5.5 percent.       "We might consolidate here a bit after the rally but we are  not entering a correction or anything. The market is shaking off  the bad news from Google and Microsoft already," and that shows  the upward momentum is strong, Schaeffer's Detrick said,  referring to sub-par results from the two technology companies  last week.      The slight pause in the summer stock rally provided further  support for low-risk government debt in the wake of remarks from  U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke that signaled the  central bank will leave short-term rates near zero for a long  time even if it stops purchasing bonds.      The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note yield   earlier touched 2.465 percent, its lowest level in over two  weeks, before turning back to 2.493 percent, which was unchanged  from late on Friday.      German Bund futures were little changed at 144.19.             CHOPPY YEN         The yen bounced back after an initial dip in Tokyo trading  on some dollar selling by Japanese investors, which in turn  triggered stop-loss selling in thin summer conditions.      "Japanese portfolio outflows is what will drive the yen  lower in coming months. ... Confidence from this victory can be  constructive but these outflows will be a slow-moving process,"  said Ned Rumpeltin, head of G-10 FX strategy at Standard  Chartered Bank in London.       The dollar was down 1 percent on the day at 99.62 yen  , a turnaround from an Asian session high of 100.71. The  euro was 0.45 percent lower at 131.35 yen, well off an  early high of 132.43.      The dollar index was 0.45 percent lower at 82.235,  slipping further away from a three-year high set earlier this  month.      Commodities were mostly firmer thanks to the softer dollar.      Spot gold recorded its biggest-single day gain in  more than a year to its highest level in a month. It last traded  up almost 3 percent at $1,333.49 an ounce.       Copper gained 1.6 percent to $7,023.75 a tonne.      Oil prices were mostly lower, erasing early gains. Brent  crude in London eked out an 8 cent, or 0.07 percent,  gain at $108.15 a barrel, but U.S. crude settled down  $1.14, or 1.06 percent, at $106.91 after hitting a near 16-month  peak of $109.32 on Friday.  
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