Saturday, August 31, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: India could save $8.5 bln by buying extra Iranian oil -minister

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India could save $8.5 bln by buying extra Iranian oil -minister
Aug 31st 2013, 19:19

By Nidhi Verma

NEW DELHI | Sat Aug 31, 2013 3:19pm EDT

NEW DELHI Aug 31 (Reuters) - India could save $8.5 billion in foreign exchange spending on crude oil imports in 2013/14 if it relied more on supplies from Iran, which is able to accept payment in rupees, India's Oil Minister M. Veerappa Moily said.

In a letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh spelling out a strategy to curb foreign exchange outflow against a backdrop of a weak currency, Moily said India was likely to import about 13 million tonnes of oil from Iran in 2013/14.

It has already imported 2 million tonnes so far in the fiscal year that began in April.

"An additional import of 11 million tonnes during 2013/14 would result in reduction in forex outflow by $8.47 billion (considering the international price of crude oil at $105 per barrel)," the letter, seen by Reuters, said.

The minister said total savings from a number of measures in the energy sector could be in the region of $20 billion.

Moily's proposal chimes with the government's eagerness to boost imports from Tehran to help prop up the rupee, which saw its biggest monthly fall in at least 18 years in August.

U.S. and EU sanctions placed on Iran over its nuclear programme have reduced its oil exports more than half from pre-sanction levels of about 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd).

In the first half of 2013, imports of Iranian oil from its four biggest buyers - China, India, Japan and South Korea - fell more than a fifth from a year ago to around 960,000 bpd.

The U.S. and European Union sanctions have pushed Tehran into accepting payment in rupees for some of its oil, and higher volumes could support the Indian currency.

"Within the UN sanctions and fully complying with the sanctions, there may be more space for imports from Iran," Finance Minister P. Chidambaram said in August.

In the first seven months of this year, India's imports from Iran have declined 46 percent from the same period last year to about 185,700 bpd, a trade data showed.

India imported nearly 58 percent more oil from Latin America in the January to July period as its Iranian shipments dropped.

Overall, Asia's third-largest economy shipped in 14.1 percent more oil in July than a year ago, while imports for the January-July period rose about 10.3 percent, the data showed. [$1 = 66.07 Indian rupees]

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: UPDATE 1-Most Brazil IPOs have lost money since 2005 -Credit Suisse

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UPDATE 1-Most Brazil IPOs have lost money since 2005 -Credit Suisse
Aug 30th 2013, 22:52

Fri Aug 30, 2013 6:52pm EDT

By Guillermo Parra-Bernal

CAMPOS DO JORDÃO, Brazil, Aug 30 (Reuters) - Many initial public offerings in Brazil have led to investor losses over the past eight years, a senior Credit Suisse Group fund manager said on Friday, with the worst results coming from oil and gas - a sector that for years was seen as the nation's most promising.

Only 37 of the 117 IPOs since the start of 2005 have yielded returns above the benchmark CDI interbank lending rate, with remainder losing as much as half of the amount initially invested, according to a presentation by Luiz Stuhlberger, who as chief investment officer oversees 43 billion reais ($18 billion) in assets for Credit Suisse Hedging Griffo.

Overall, Brazilian offerings have yielded a negative 15.2 percent to investors since 2005, with the worst numbers coming from oil IPOs - which posted a negative 51 percent, Stuhlberger said. IPOs in telecommunications firms, toll operators and commercial property developers were the best options for investors, returning 32 percent, 54 percent and 1.8 percent, respectively.

"Most of these IPOs didn't even compensate the cost of equity," he said, adding that "the more the company depended on future results, the worse the perfomance of its stock."

Stuhlberger's data explains why Brazil's once-hyped IPO market has struggled over the past couple of years, given the risk of overpriced deals, flagging economic growth and the impact of heavy state interference in some sectors of the economy.

He said that investors, for instance, could have done better by investing their money in good-quality companies, which he defines as those whose share price trade between two and three times their book value. Some of those companies are beverage maker Cia de Bebidas das Americas SA, also the country's largest private-sector firm by market value and shoemaker Arezzo SA.

"Good quality companies tend to be a good deal for investors - you might pay a little premium here and there to have them, but the return is there," he noted.

Stung by a string of deals that failed to deliver the promised returns, investors are being extra cautious in Brazil, casting a dark cloud over a pipeline of potential deals. Companies looking to go public face a delicate balancing act - how to offer adequate risk and return to investors as growth in Latin America's largest economy loses momentum.

In the case of oil firms that listed shares over the past eight years, one of the worst cases was OGX Petróleo e Gas Participações SA - whose shares have shed more than 90 percent of their value since going public in June 2008. According to Stuhlberger, by excluding OGX from the sample, overall returns would have been around minus 12 percent.

Currently OGX, which is controlled by tycoon Eike Batista, is struggling with high debt, dwindling cash holdings and delays in certain projects. The company has missed output targets repeatedly over the past months, leading to significant declines in its stocks and bonds.

Part of the poor performance of Brazil's benchmark stock index, the Bovespa, could partially be blamed on OGX declines, Stuhlberger noted. OGX is the fourth-largest stock in the index by weight. The Bovespa is down 18 percent this year.

OGX shed 40 percent on Friday to 0.30 reais, a record low. Investors said part of the drop was on concern that the company would be excluded from the Bovespa.

On Thursday, BM&FBovespa SA Chief Executive Officer Edemir Pinto said the only events that could lead to OGX being taken off the index would be if it were to request bankruptcy protection or go out of business. BM&FBovespa operates the Bovespa index.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: CANADA FX DEBT-C$ posts 3rd straight weekly loss

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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ posts 3rd straight weekly loss
Aug 30th 2013, 20:50

Fri Aug 30, 2013 4:50pm EDT

* C$ at C$1.0530 vs US$, or 94.97 U.S. cents

* Currency slips 0.3 pct on week

* Investors buy greenback amid Syria tensions

* Canadian GDP tepid, but not as bad as expected

By Alastair Sharp

TORONTO, Aug 30 (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar ended steady against its U.S. counterpart on Friday, hurt as the United States made it clear it planned to punish Syria over a chemical weapons attack but helped by Canadian economic that was not as dismal as feared.

But the loonie, as Canada's currency is colloquially known, weakened 0.3 percent on the week, its third straight weekly decline.

Canadian gross domestic product data for the second quarter showed slowing growth, but it slightly exceeded forecasts despite a contraction in June.

Meanwhile, investors bought the greenback as a safe haven as U.S. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry said President Bashar al-Assad's government was responsible for a poison gas attack in Damascus and must be punished.

"Markets remain fairly nervous over the Syria issue and whether there will be military action," said Blake Jespersen, a managing director of foreign exchange sales at BMO Capital Markets.

He said some of the trading flow was due to investors rebalancing their currency holdings at the end of the month.

GDP grew by 1.7 percent, annualized, in the second quarter, Statistics Canada said, hurt by a Quebec construction strike and flooding in Alberta. That was down from 2.2 percent growth in the first quarter.

Given that the report was no worse than economists had feared, the currency pared early losses after it was released.

"The concern was that we could get a downward surprise on the report, so this could provide modest support for the currency," said Paul Ferley, assistant chief economist at Royal Bank of Canada.

The currency ended the session changing hands at C$1.0530 to the U.S. dollar, or 94.97 U.S. cents, identical to its Thursday close.

The currency has benefited from rising oil prices, which were on track for their biggest monthly gain in a year, but that boost was offset by a flight to safe-haven currencies, such as the greenback amid escalating tensions in Syria.

"My view is that when we have these very high oil prices and geopolitical uncertainty, if you are going to pick a commodity currency, the Canadian dollar still looks like a pretty good candidate," said Stefane Marion, chief economist at National Bank Financial.

Prices for Canadian government debt were mixed, with the two-year bond flat to yield 1.194 percent, and the benchmark 10-year bond down 11 Canadian cents to yield 2.620 percent. Prices for bonds in the four-to-seven-year range rose.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks fall after Kerry speaks on Syria; bonds rise

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks fall after Kerry speaks on Syria; bonds rise
Aug 30th 2013, 20:30

Fri Aug 30, 2013 4:30pm EDT

  * Dollar remains near 4-week high, Treasuries rise      * U.S. shares fall as Kerry talks of punishing Syria      * Oil and gold fall amid uncertainty          NEW YORK, Aug 30 (Reuters) - Stocks fell and U.S. Treasury  prices gained on Friday after Secretary of State John Kerry made  a forceful case for the United States to punish Syrian President  Bashar al-Assad as he released evidence the Syrian government  used chemical weapons to attack civilians.        Kerry's remarks, which were televised, stoked concerns that  the United States was ready to launch a military strike and  added to a subdued tone of trading ahead of a three-day U.S.  holiday weekend. Limp data on U.S. consumer income, spending and  inflation contributed to the day's tone.      Arguing that it was essential to show those who would use  chemical weapons in the future that the world will not let Syria  get away with it, Kerry said the United States was joined by the  likes of France, "our oldest ally," in its determination to  respond to the attack, which he said killed more than 1,400  people in Damascus last week.      The concerns about a U.S. military strike made investors  reluctant to bet against safe-haven U.S. debt and helped send  the dollar to a four-week high.       "People are uneasy not knowing what's going on, and it will  probably be in the background at least so long as it continues,"  said John Carey, portfolio manager at Pioneer Investment  Management in Boston, which has about $200 billion of assets  under management.       "Syria isn't the crisis in and of itself, but if we do take  military action, there could be repercussions that will hurt  us," he said. "You never know, with military action, the kind of  consequences you'll see. It's always very risky."      U.S. stocks slipped, with the S&P 500 index ending August  with its worst monthly showing in over a year. A weak market  tone was set early in the day by data showing U.S. consumer  spending eked out only a 0.1 percent rise in July and inflation  was tame, with a price index for consumer spending edging up 0.1  percent in the month.   .      The Dow Jones industrial average was down 37.79  points, or 0.25 percent, at 14,803.16. The Standard & Poor's 500  Index was down 5.83 points, or 0.36 percent, at 1,632.34.  The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 30.44 points, or  0.84 percent, at 3,589.87.      In the Treasuries market, the yield on the 10-year note   eased to 2.7747 percent.       The dollar index, which measures the greenback's  value against six major currencies, was at 82.067, not far from  a four-week high of 82.263 touched earlier. The dollar is a  traditional safe harbor for investors.      Among emerging currencies, the Indian rupee has  tumbled 10.4 percent against the dollar so far this month, and  looks to be heading for its largest monthly fall ever, according  to Thomson Reuters data. {ID:nL20GV12L]      India is seeking support from other emerging market  countries for a coordinated intervention in offshore foreign  exchange markets after a currency rout the past three months,  but at least one critical partner, Brazil, said it is not  involved in such planning at this time..      Most major equity markets and many emerging currencies  looked set to end the week and the month sharply lower as  investors pull out of riskier assets in anticipation that the  Federal Reserve, which next meets on Sept. 17-18, will begin to  cut back on its stimulus measures and on some form of Western  intervention against Syria.      A Reuters asset allocation poll of 54 fund managers across  the United States, Europe and Japan showed that investors had  increased cash holdings to their highest level in a year, while  also lifting exposure to equities and cutting bond positions.                SYRIA UNCERTAINTY MIRRORED IN OIL      Conflicting signs on possible military action against Syria  were mirrored in the trajectory of oil prices on Friday.      On Friday afternoon, oil prices fell, rebounded, then fell  again as traders watched the U.S. secretary of State's televised  address for signs of what the Obama administration might do.      Fears of a broader conflict in the Middle East had eased  slightly after Britain said it would not join any military  action, although France said it still supported a move to punish  Syria's government for an apparent poison gas attack on  civilians.       The easing of concern didn't last even as Russia and China  remained opposed to any move and China cautioned against any  U.N. Security Council action until the investigation is  complete.       Brent crude oil settled lower, near $114 a barrel, off highs  of $117 set earlier this week when military action seemed  imminent. U.S. crude was down $1.13 to $107.69 a barrel  .      "The situation is still volatile," said Alex Yap, an analyst  at energy consultancy FGE in Singapore. "If the U.S. decides to  attack, prices could be pushed higher."                 GRIM MONTH      MSCI's world equity index, which tracks  shares in 45 countries, fell 0.3 percent on Friday, closing out  its worst week since June 21.       European shares felt the pressure from a drop in oil stocks  with the broader STOXX Europe 600 index down 0.9  percent, taking weekly losses to around 2.4 percent.       In other commodity markets, gold fell 0.9 percent to  below $1,400 an ounce, moving away from a 3-1/2-month high hit  Wednesday when fears over Syria prompted a flight to safety.  
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Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX-Dollar rises to 4-week high as Syria spurs demand for safety

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FOREX-Dollar rises to 4-week high as Syria spurs demand for safety
Aug 30th 2013, 20:19

Fri Aug 30, 2013 4:19pm EDT

  * Syria conflict continues to haunt market      * U.N. investigators finish gathering samples in Syria      * U.S. makes case for limited military action      * Weak U.S. consumer spending muddles Fed outlook      * Speculators raise bets in favor of the dollar          By Julie Haviv      NEW YORK, Aug 30 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar rose to a  four-week high against a basket of major currencies on Friday,  ending the month with its strongest   gain since May, as the  possibility of a U.S. military strike on Syria had investors  shunning risk.       The United States made clear on Friday that it would punish  Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for the "brutal and flagrant"  chemical weapons attack that it says killed more than 1,400  people in Damascus last week.       U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry made a broad case for  limited U.S. military action against Syria for its alleged use  of chemical weapons, saying it could not go unpunished for such  a "crime against humanity."       "Today's combination of risk aversion (on Syria) and  expectations of Fed tapering next month suggest we will have  continued dollar strength next week," said Camilla Sutton, chief  currency strategist at Scotiabank in Toronto.      "Next week should be quiet leading up to Friday's nonfarm  payrolls report, but the technicals and fundamentals suggest we  have entered a new period of U.S. dollar strength," she said.       Worries about a Syrian conflict pushed the dollar index,  which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major  currencies, to a four-week high of 82.263.      The dollar index, which last traded up 0.2 percent at 82.078  , was also buoyed by weakness in the euro, the largest  component of the index, which fell on soft data out of the  region.       A team of U.N. investigators has finished gathering samples  and evidence in Syria related to a suspected chemical weapons  attack that killed hundreds of people in suburbs near Damascus  last week and is packing up to leave, a U.N. spokesman said on  Friday.       A U.S. intelligence report disclosed that there was "high  confidence" that Syrian forces had used chemical weapons  multiple times in the last year, including the Aug. 21 attack  outside Damascus.       The dollar index was up 0.9 percent on the week, its third  straight weekly gain. After falling for two straight months, the  dollar index gained 0.8 percent in August, its best gain since  May.      Currency speculators, meanwhile, increased their bets in  favor of the U.S. dollar in the latest week, according to data  from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission released on  Friday, snapping five straight weeks of declines.         The value of the dollar's net long position rose to $15.82  billion in the week ended Aug. 27 from $13.54 billion the  previous week.      Looking ahead, next Friday's nonfarm payrolls report should  be the highlight of the week since the state of the jobs market  is key to Federal Reserve policy. A strong number should affirm  expectations that the Fed will pull back on its monetary  stimulus when it meets later in the month.       U.S. financial markets will be closed on Monday in  observance of the U.S. Labor Day holiday.      Friday's U.S. data were soft, save for the manufacturing  index for the Midwest, which saw the index for prices paid, an  inflation signal, rise to its highest since November.         But the 0.1 percent increase in both personal income and  consumption was lower than expected for the month of July. many  market participants, however, believe those numbers won't  prevent the Federal Reserve from paring back its stimulus next  month, even if the reduction is at a smaller scale.      The euro was down 0.2 percent at $1.3214 after  earlier touching a five-week low of $1.3172. The currency  slipped from highs after data showed benign inflation and  elevated unemployment at 12.1 percent.       Investors will be wary of buying the euro before next week's  European Central Bank interest rate meeting, where policymakers  are likely to reiterate their pledge that rates will be low for  some time as economic recovery sets in slowly.      "Euro zone unemployment shows that the real economy is in  dire straits and underlines that the ECB must keep monetary  policy super-accommodative for years to come," said David Brown,  economist at New View Economics.      The dollar fell 0.2 percent to 98.14 yen, according  to Reuters data.  
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Reuters: US Dollar Report: Most Brazil IPOs have lost money since 2005 -Credit Suisse

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Most Brazil IPOs have lost money since 2005 -Credit Suisse
Aug 30th 2013, 21:48

By Guillermo Parra-Bernal

Fri Aug 30, 2013 5:48pm EDT

CAMPOS DO JORDÃO, Brazil, Aug 30 (Reuters) - Many initial public offerings in Brazil have led to investor losses over the past eight years, a senior Credit Suisse Group fund manager said on Friday, with the worst results coming from oil and gas - a sector that for years was seen as the nation's most promising.

Only 37 of the 117 IPOs since the start of 2005 have yielded returns above the benchmark CDI interbank lending rate, with remainder losing as much as half of the amount initially invested, according to a presentation by Luiz Stuhlberger, who as chief investment officer oversees 43 billion reais ($18 billion) in assets for Credit Suisse Hedging Griffo.

Overall, Brazilian offerings have yielded a negative 15.2 percent to investors since 2005, with the worst numbers coming from oil IPOs - which posted a negative 51 percent, Stuhlberger said. IPOs in telecommunications firms, toll operators and commercial property developers were the best options for investors, returning 32 percent, 54 percent and 1.8 percent, respectively.

Stuhlberger's data explains why Brazil's once-hyped IPO market has struggled over the past couple of years, given the risk of overpriced deals, flagging economic growth and the impact of heavy state interference in some sectors of the economy.

He said that investors, for instance, could have done better by investing their money in good-quality companies, which he defines as those whose share price trade between two and three times their book value. Some of those companies are beverage maker Cia de Bebidas das Americas SA, also the country's largest private-sector firm by market value and shoemaker Arezzo SA.

Stung by a string of deals that failed to deliver the promised returns, investors are being extra cautious in Brazil, casting a dark cloud over a pipeline of potential deals. Companies looking to go public face a delicate balancing act - how to offer adequate risk and return to investors as growth in Latin America's largest economy loses momentum.

In the case of oil firms that listed shares over the past eight years, one of the worst cases was OGX Petróleo e Gas Participações SA - whose shares have shed more than 90 percent of their value since going public in June 2008. According to Stuhlberger, by excluding OGX from the sample, overall returns would have been around minus 12 percent.

Currently OGX, which is controlled by tycoon Eike Batista, is struggling with high debt, dwindling cash holdings and delays in certain projects. The company has missed output targets repeatedly over the past months, leading to significant declines in its stocks and bonds.

Part of the poor performance of Brazil's benchmark stock index, the Bovespa, could partially be blamed on OGX declines, Stuhlberger noted. OGX is the fourth-largest stock in the index by weight. The Bovespa is down 18 percent this year.

OGX shed 40 percent on Friday to 0.30 reais, a record low. Investors said part of the drop was on concern that the company would be excluded from the Bovespa.

On Thursday, BM&FBovespa SA Chief Executive Officer Edemir Pinto said the only events that could lead to OGX being taken off the index would be if it were to request bankruptcy protection or go out of business. BM&FBovespa operates the Bovespa index.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: India cbank says not considering converting idle gold into bullion

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India cbank says not considering converting idle gold into bullion
Aug 31st 2013, 11:19

MUMBAI | Sat Aug 31, 2013 7:19am EDT

MUMBAI Aug 31 (Reuters) - The Reserve Bank of India said on Saturday it was not considering converting India's idle gold into bullion according to a statement.

Reuters had reported that the central bank was planning to ask banks to buy household gold and divert it to precious metal refiners in an effort to reduce India's current account deficit and improve the domestic supply of gold.

Meanwhile, The Economic Times newspaper reported on Saturday that the RBI was considering mobilising gold from the country's temple trusts.

"There have been some news stories in the media in the last couple of days about the Reserve Bank of India discussing/considering various options of converting idle gold, including that available with temple trusts, into bullion," the RBI said.

"The Reserve Bank clarifies that no such proposal is under its consideration at this juncture," it added.

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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Oil hits six-month high, shares fall on Syria fears

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Oil hits six-month high, shares fall on Syria fears
Aug 28th 2013, 11:31

Wed Aug 28, 2013 5:05am EDT

* Brent crude jumps 2.4 pct to 6-month peak, gold at 3-month high

* World shares falls to 7-week low, Nikkei hits 2-month trough

* Yen holds near 2-week high against dollar

* Turkish lira, Indian rupee hit record lows

By Richard Hubbard

LONDON, Aug 28 (Reuters) - Concerns that probable military strikes by Western powers against Syria could cause upheaval in the Middle East pushed oil up by over $2 a barrel on Wednesday, sent world shares lower for a second day and extended a rout in emerging markets.

Washington and its allies appeared to be gearing up for a strike against President Bashar al-Assad's forces, blamed for last week's chemical weapons attacks, a move which could prompt retaliatory action and hit crude supply in the region.

Brent crude traded above $117 at a six-month high and the U.S. benchmark soared to its highest level in over two years.

A scramble for safety sent MSCI's world equity index to a seven week low led by a sharp selloff on Wall Street, while the safe-haven yen hit a two-week high against the dollar.

Emerging markets such as Syria's neighbour Turkey, pummelled by an expected reduction in U.S. stimulus measures, were also hit, with some flows providing support in western Europe.

"The market feels an attack on Syria is highly probable but what they're concerned about is the retaliation," said Mike Gallagher, managing director of IDEAglobal.

In the Middle East, Dubai's stock index tumbled 5.2 percent after already plunging 7.0 percent on Tuesday, leaving it at a six-week low. It is still up 49 percent this year.

"We could see a wider spillover into the region which could easily push oil prices up, at least temporarily, to $120 or $125 a barrel," Gallagher said.

The heightened Middle East tension has come as markets were already on edge about an expected reduction in stimulus by the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has seen U.S. bond yields climb and triggered a shift by investors away from emerging markets.

Syria's neighbour Turkey has proved vulnerable on both fronts seeing its currency, the lira, hit a record low of 2.07 to the dollar in early trade. The main Istanbul share index was down 1.5 percent, after tumbling 4.7 percent on Tuesday to close at its lowest level in a year.

The rout in the emerging world has extended, with the Indian rupee losing 3.7 percent to hit a new record low of 68.75 to the dollar, while some southeast Asian currencies reached multi-year lows.

Indonesia's rupiah posted a new four-year low as investors wait for a hastily-convened Bank Indonesia (BI) board meeting set for Thursday. Speculation is mounting it will opt for another rate hike to defend the currency.

The selloff brought MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan down 1.7 percent to its lowest level since July 9, extending the previous day's 1.2 percent drop.

In Europe, the picture was steadier after a recent run of good economic data added to the region's appeal. The single currency had inched up 0.1 percent versus the yen to about 130.03 yen and was little changed against the dollar at $1.3380 .

The flight to quality lifted German government bonds, sending the 10-year Bund yield down 3 basis points to 1.824 percent as it moves further away from Friday's 1-1/2 year highs of 1.98 percent.

However, European stocks were down for a third day as the concerns about a reduction in bond buying by the Fed, and a political crisis in Italy add tot he worries over military action fuelled profit taking on an 8 percent rally seen since late June.

The FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was down 0.3 percent at 1,198.43 points in early trade after recording its largest daily drop in two months on Tuesday.

"The focus on Syria and the spike in oil prices was all that was needed to start the move (down)," said Nick Xanders, head of strategy at BTIG, who saw room for the market to fall further.

Gold shared in the safe haven buying, extending its gains into a fifth straight session and climbing over 1 percent to its highest in more than three months.

Spot gold traded around $1,425 an ounce having hit a high of $1,433.31, its highest since May 14. Silver was up 2.3 percent to $25.02 an ounce.

"We may be seeing a new trading paradigm setting in the next few days, one whereby investors sour on stocks and file back into commodities, with oil and gold likely being the two favourites in the group," INTL FCStone analyst Edward Meir wrote in a note.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: WRAPUP 2-Indian rupee hurtles lower as foreign investors flee

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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WRAPUP 2-Indian rupee hurtles lower as foreign investors flee
Aug 28th 2013, 10:16

Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:16am EDT

* Indian rupee hits record low of 68.75; RBI intervenes

* Indian shares slump, but recover on state firm buying

* Foreign investors turning heavy sellers of Indian shares

By Abhishek Vishnoi and Himank Sharma

MUMBAI, Aug 28 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee slumped to a record low of more than 68 to the dollar on Wednesday on growing worries that foreign investors will continue to sell out of a country facing stiff economic challenges and volatile global markets.

The pummelling in markets - which sent the rupee reeling as much as 3.7 percent to an all-time low of 68.75 - forced the central bank to intervene while state-run Life Insurance Corp was spotted buying shares, allowing domestic indexes to erase steep early losses.

"If steps are not taken to implement the reforms necessary to tackle the structural issues, the government will be left with the so-called '3D options': debt default, devaluation, deflation," said Angelo Corbetta, head of Asia equity for Pioneer Investments in London.

"In India devaluation is happening now and deflation could be about to start. The good news is that the debt default is highly unlikely."

Foreign investors sold almost $1 billion of Indian shares in the eight sessions through Tuesday - a worrisome prospect given stocks had been India's one sturdy source of capital inflows.

If more foreign investors throw in the towel, traders fear it will put the country at risk of a vicious cycle in which the ensuing hit to confidence in turn slams shares and the currency even harder.

Policymakers have consistently struggled to come up with steps that can convince markets they can stabilise the rupee and attract funds into the country despite extraordinary measures last month by the central bank to drain liquidity and action to curb gold imports and cut India's huge oil import bill.

The partially convertible rupee clawed back some ground later in the day and was at 67.92 as of 1015 GMT, after posting its biggest daily percentage fall in 18 years on Tuesday.

Still, an assault on the psychologically key 70 level appeared imminent.

RISING OIL PRICES, FED FEARS AMPLIFY PRESSURE

India badly needs foreign capital as it struggles with a record high current account deficit, growing fiscal pressures and an economy growing at the slowest in a decade.

The failure to address India's economic challenges is becoming an increasing source of tension at a time when fears of a possible U.S.-led military strike against Syria are knocking down Asian markets, with the prospect that the Federal Reserve will soon end its prolonged period of cheap money further raising concerns.

At the same time, rising domestic bond yields threaten to raise borrowing costs across the already slowing economy, while global prices of oil and gold - the country's two biggest imports - have surged this week.

"The end game for the current decline would be the day the rupee stops falling, alongside government measures like a substantial diesel price hike," said Samir Arora, a fund manager at Helios Capital in Singapore.

BNP Paribas on Wednesday slashed its economic growth forecast for India for the fiscal year ending in March to 3.7 percent from its previous 5.2 percent - the weakest growth since 1991-92 when India buckled under a balance of payments crisis that required a loan from the International Monetary Fund.

"India's parliament remains toxically dysfunctional with little, if any, business conducted," BNP said.

"And, with next year's general election looming ever nearer, the government's willingness to instigate a politically unpopular fiscal tightening is close to nil."

India is due to post April-June gross domestic product data on Friday, with analysts estimating the economy grew at an annual rate of 4.7 percent, roughly in line with the previous quarter. It will also post July federal fiscal deficit figures.

LACKING CONFIDENCE

The rupee has fallen around 19 percent this year, by far the biggest decliner among the Asian currencies tracked by Reuters.

Meanwhile, India's main National Stock Exchange index fell as much as 3.2 percent, although suspected buying by LIC led the index to recover in the afternoon.

Foreign investors are paring equity positions, having sold a net $3.5 billion in stocks since the start of July, although their net purchases so far this year still total $12 billion.

Among the blue chips that fell the most on Wednesday were Axis Bank Ltd and ICICI Bank Ltd, a concern given foreign investors had so far largely held on to their investments in lenders, owning more than 40 percent of each.

In bond markets, foreign investors have sold more heavily, with outflows reaching $4.5 billion so far this year.

Yet the government has so far failed to provide a coherent response, analysts said. Its approval of infrastructure projects on Tuesday was trumped by concerns about the fiscal deficit after India's lower house of parliament this week approved a 1.35 trillion rupees ($20.47 billion) plan to provide cheap gain to the poor.

In its latest initiative, the government late on Tuesday proposed setting up a task force to look into currency swap agreements, a measure analysts said could bring some relief if carried out in time by reducing market demand for dollars or other major currencies.

"Lets see what the authorities do, but if the government can come out with some really big currency swap arrangement with some countries, that can be a strong positive," said Uday Bhatt, a forex dealer with UCO Bank in Mumbai.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: Kazakhstan to peg tenge to U.S. dollar, euro, rouble on Sept. 2

Reuters: US Dollar Report
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
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Kazakhstan to peg tenge to U.S. dollar, euro, rouble on Sept. 2
Aug 28th 2013, 11:45

ALMATY | Wed Aug 28, 2013 7:45am EDT

ALMATY Aug 28 (Reuters) - Kazakhstan's central bank said on Wednesday it would drop the managed float of the tenge currency and peg it to a basket of currencies including the dollar, euro and Russian rouble, starting Sept. 2.

"We do not rule out that hina's yuan can become part of the currency basket in the future," National Bank Chairman Grigory Marchenko told a news conference.

Kazakhstan's central bank has so far used a managed float mechanism to control the stability of the tenge. It has used the U.S. dollar as a reference currency.

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Reuters: US Dollar Report: FOREX -Dollar rebounds, seen as safest haven as Syria attack looms

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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FOREX -Dollar rebounds, seen as safest haven as Syria attack looms
Aug 28th 2013, 11:55

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Wed Aug 28, 2013 7:55am EDT

  * Dollar recovers against yen amid Syria tensions      * Dollar to likely take on dominant safe-haven role      * Yen falls as BOJ's Iwata says bank will continue QE      * BoE's Carney speech main focus for sterling        By Anooja Debnath      LONDON, Aug 28 (Reuters) - The dollar bounced back from a  two-week low against the yen and climbed versus the Swiss franc  on Wednesday as traders took the view that it is the safest  option given the risk of Western military action in Syria.       Strategists added that the yen slipped after Bank of Japan  Deputy Governor Kikuo Iwata said the bank will continue its  quantitative easing until inflation stabilises at 2 percent.         The dollar was up 0.4 percent at 97.44 yen,  recovering from an intra-day trough of 96.81 yen which was its  lowest since Aug. 12. It was also up 0.4 percent against the  Swiss franc at 0.9207 francs.      The dollar was up 0.4 percent against a basket of  currencies at 81.430.      The United States and its allies appear to be gearing up for  a military strike against Syria, perhaps within days, as  punishment for last week's chemical weapons attacks blamed on  President Bashar al-Assad's government.       "The yen and Swiss franc have been supported on safe-haven  demand given the developments in Syria, but I think we are now  increasingly going to see the dollar taking on the dominant role  among the safe-haven currencies and gaining broadly, even  against the yen and the Swiss franc," said Ian Stannard, head of  European FX strategy at Morgan Stanley.      On Tuesday, the dollar had tumbled about 1.5 percent, its  biggest one-day drop versus the Japanese currency since June 11.  Reported options expiries at 97.00 yen and 97.70 yen could keep  the pair close to those levels.       Stannard said a move above 98.15 yen would be a bullish  signal for the dollar, while analysts said that any further dips  in the pair would be limited and that the dollar may settle into  a range of roughly 96 yen to 99 yen.      "There will probably be some yen-selling by Japanese players  if the dollar were to fall below 95 yen," said Daisuke Karakama  at Mizuho Bank in Tokyo, adding that Japanese institutional  investors might buy the dollar if it falls to such levels.       The euro was up 0.1 percent against the yen at 130.03 yen  . Against the dollar, the single currency was down 0.4  percent at $1.3348.      Analysts at Citi said the euro could struggle if the U.S.  Federal Reserve trimmed its stimulus which would tighten global  monetary conditions, raise peripheral funding costs and hurt the  bloc's nascent recovery.      "Uncertainty about the political outlook in Italy could pick  up as well in coming weeks... renewed pick up in peripheral and  growth risks could make case for more ECB easing before long,"  said Valentin Marinov, head of European G10 FX strategy at Citi.      Financial markets remained wary about the prospects of fresh  political instability in Italy.           With investors avoiding risk, growth-linked currencies  struggled. The Australian dollar was down 0.7 percent  at $0.8922 and the New Zealand dollar was down 0.5  percent at $0.7754.      Markets will focus on Bank of England Governor Mark Carney's  speech later today where he is expected to reiterate his dovish  stance in an attempt to rein in rising market interest rates,  which will weigh on sterling.  
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