Friday, July 19, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares dip, but set for fourth week of gains

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares dip, but set for fourth week of gains
Jul 19th 2013, 10:01

Fri Jul 19, 2013 6:01am EDT

  * European shares dip but head for fourth week of gains      * Asian stocks mixed after Wall Street's record high      * Japan upper house election on Sunday in focus, yen claws  up      * Bonds, commodities see quiet end to week        By Marc Jones      LONDON, July 19 (Reuters) - World stocks fell back on  Friday, but were set for a fourth week of back-to-back gains  following generally strong U.S. earnings and assurances from the  Federal Reserve about its plans for stimulus withdrawal.      Major currency and commodity markets were subdued, with the  dollar giving back some of Thursday's gains, the euro   steady and the yen pushing up on position-squaring  ahead of elections in Japan on Sunday.       Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 share index was down 0.4  percent by mid-morning after some weaker earnings overnight, but  it was firmly on course for its first four-week run of  uninterrupted gains since May, as was MSCI's 45-country  all-world index, which fell 0.1 percent.        Analysts say the rises in world stocks have been fuelled  this week by solid corporate earnings, especially in the United  States, and by reassurance from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke over  the U.S. central bank's easy monetary policy.       "A lot of cash has gone into the market over the last few  months but people are now sitting back a bit," said Terry  Torrison, managing director at Monaco-based McLaren Securities.       Wall Street finished at another record high on Thursday but  was expected to open 0.2 lower  when it resumes  later, after disappointing results from Google and Microsoft  after the bell.        Asian trading was choppy overnight with profit-taking on  Japan's Nikkei matched by some cautious yen   buying ahead of Upper House elections on Sunday.       The elections are expected to strengthen the hand of Prime  Minister Shinzo Abe and his radical stimulus strategy, with his  ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its New Komeito Party  (NKP) coalition partner expected to win resoundingly.      Some economists worry that if the LDP wins outright Abe  could sideline economic reforms and prioritise more nationalist  policies, though that was not the consensus.       "If the LDP-NKP coalition wins control of the upper house  and receives a decent mandate for reform, we would remain  comfortable with our USD/JPY forecast profile of 103 in 3 months  and 105 in 12 months," Barclays Capital analysts wrote in a  report.                 G20      In the debt market, German Bund futures were in a holding  pattern having hit their highest level in six weeks in the  previous session.       This week's reassurances from Bernanke have helped beat back  lingering concerns about near-term rises in bond yields and  reduced volatility in both core and emerging financial markets.         Euro zone periphery bonds were also little changed following  gains on Thursday after the ECB loosened its lending rules, and  after Portugal's centre-right government easily defeated a  no-confidence vote.       Ten-year Spanish government bond yields were  1.3 basis points higher at 4.65 percent while the Italian  equivalent was down 1.3 bps at 4.41 percent.  Portuguese 10-year yields were 3.3 bps lower at  7.07 percent.      Market participants were also awaiting a meeting of Group of  20 finance ministers for signs of an orchestrated approach to  the end of U.S. money-printing, which could help defuse  volatility in global markets.      The G20, which meets in Moscow on Friday and Saturday,  includes many of the emerging economies that have been at the  sharp end of the dollar's surge since Bernanke first signalled  in May that the Fed would roll back its bond-buying programme.         After a steady week for commodities, gold was flat at  $1,286 an ounce while Brent oil held above $108 a  barrel, hovering near a three-month high on hopes of a gradual  recovery in U.S. demand.      New claims for jobless benefits fell in the world's biggest  economy and factory data improved on Thursday, close on the  heels of a steep drawdown in U.S. crude stocks for a third  straight week.  
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