Thursday, August 15, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar, stocks slip as markets seek Fed clarity

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar, stocks slip as markets seek Fed clarity
Aug 15th 2013, 06:29

Thu Aug 15, 2013 2:29am EDT

  * Dollar drops as Japan ministers quash corporate tax-cut  hopes      * Nikkei skids 2.1 pct, moving away from one-week closing  high      * Euro buoyed as data confirms 18-month euro zone recession  over          By Lisa Twaronite      TOKYO, Aug 15 (Reuters) - Asian stocks fell on Thursday and  the dollar slipped as uncertainty over when the U.S. Federal  Reserve will start to pare back its stimulus offset a brighter  economic picture in Europe.       Japanese shares led losses, after cabinet ministers shot  down a media report earlier this week that the government is  considering cuts in corporate taxes.      European shares were expected to fall slightly from  2-1/2-month highs on Thursday, with financial spreadbetters  predicting Britain's FTSE 100 to open 7 points lower, or  0.1 percent; Germany's DAX to drop 8 points, or 0.1  percent; and France's CAC 40 to open flat. U.S. stock  futures were little changed.      The dollar tumbled about 0.5 percent against the Japanese  currency to 97.63 yen, while the euro fell 0.2 percent to  buy 129.76 yen.       Against a basket of major currencies, the dollar fell  about 0.3 percent as the euro rose about 0.3 percent to $1.3292  .      The stronger yen and fading tax-cut hopes pressured Tokyo's  Nikkei stock average, which skidded 2.1 percent, off a  one-week closing high hit on Wednesday. Thin summer conditions  amplified moves, market participants said.          Japanese government spokesman Yoshihide Suga and Finance  Minister Taro Aso both downplayed this week's report in the  Nikkei business daily that the government is considering  lowering the corporate tax. Aso said such cuts would not have an  immediate impact on the economy.       MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   slipped 0.2 percent.      Data on Wednesday showed that the economies of Germany and  France grew more quickly than expected in the second quarter,  pulling the euro zone out of an 18-month recession.                   MIXED SIGNALS      The yield on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes   edged away from nearly two-year highs hit earlier this week.      A selloff of U.S. Treasuries on Monday and Tuesday saw  yields post their biggest two-day increase since early July on  speculation that signs of U.S. and European economic growth  might lead the Fed to taper its $85 billion-a-month in asset  purchases as early as September.      A Reuters poll on Wednesday showed a majority of economists  expect the Fed to reduce bond purchases at its Sept. 17-18  policy meeting.       "The market is getting nervous about tapering. I expect that  to happen in September and the dollar to start rising then. But  it is likely to go through some adjustment before that as there  are concerns that tapering could spark risk-off trading as it  did in May-June," said Hideki Amikura, forex manager at Nomura  Trust and Banking.      Recent U.S. data sent mixed signals on the strength of the  economic recovery, and comments from Fed officials fell short of  clarifying the bank's policy outlook.       St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard said on  Wednesday that the Fed risks pushing inflation even lower if it  tapers bond purchases too aggressively, and could take a more  cautious approach by initially only scaling back by a small  amount.       U.S. producer prices were flat in July, data on Wednesday  showed, suggesting domestic inflation will likely stay below the  Fed's 2 percent target for the foreseeable future.         Data on Thursday will include the July consumer price index,  industrial production, jobless claims for the most recent week  and a U.S. mid-Atlantic business survey.       In commodities markets, copper slipped 0.3 percent  to $7,296.50, moving away from a nine-week high hit on Tuesday.  Gold slipped from earlier highs, buying $1,339.27 per  ounce, after gaining around 1 percent in the previous session.       Brent crude prices rose 0.4 percent to $110.62 a  barrel, extending gains from the previous session on a drop in  U.S. oil inventories. Investors also feared unrest in Egypt  could choke key supply routes or spill over into key oil  producing nations.  
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