Friday, August 23, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Emerging market rout eases as data lifts growth hopes

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Emerging market rout eases as data lifts growth hopes
Aug 23rd 2013, 08:27

Fri Aug 23, 2013 4:27am EDT

  * Asian shares, currencies mark upbeat end to tough week      * U.S. debt yields dip from two-year highs      * European shares steady, Nikkei surges as yen falls      * Upbeat manufacturing data hints at global recovery      * Concerns remain about impact of Fed stimulus withdrawal          By Marc Jones      LONDON, Aug 23 (Reuters) - The rout in emerging markets  eased on Friday and world shares headed for a second day of  gains, as data suggesting the global economy is improving took  the edge off concerns about the impact of a cut in U.S. monetary  stimulus.      Europe's main stock markets started little changed  after Asian shares and currencies saw an upbeat end to a torrid  week that has wiped billions of dollars off of emerging markets  for the second time since June.       MSCI's emerging share index managed its first  gains after six sessions in the red and the selling of India's  rupee subsided after the currency's worst week against  the dollar in decades.       The relief rally was supported by a dip in U.S. bond yields  , which edged back from the previous session's  two-year high to 2.89 percent in early European trading, while  the dollar steadied after hitting a three-week high.         "Hopefully the worst (of the emerging market selling) may  now be over," said Hans Peterson global head of asset allocation  at SEB investment management.       "It doesn't seem to be a repeat of the 1997 (Asian crisis)  situation... and it seems like people are not so keen on being  extremely short anymore so it might twist around a bit."      This week's market turbulence has being driven by growing  evidence that the U.S. Federal Reserve is ready to start turning  off the taps on its huge stimulus programme, a conviction that  is being bolstered by strengthening global data.      Germany confirmed on Friday that its economy grew at a  muscular 0.7 percent in the second quarter.       Purchasing managers surveys this week have already showed  better-than-expected growth in the euro zone, a Chinese  manufacturing rebound and U.S. manufacturing activity rising to  a five-month high.       U.S. Treasury yields tend to set the benchmark for borrowing  costs across the globe, so the recent rise - which is expected  to continue - is making it more difficult for indebted countries  and companies to pay their bills.      Singapore Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said on  Friday, however, that it would not be in anyone's interest for  very low global interest rates to continue indefinitely, as this  leads to financial imbalances.          "The tapering of QE and tightening of U.S. monetary policy,  when it eventually occurs, will not be a bad thing for the  region's economies," Tharman told a banking conference in  Singapore.               DOLLAR EDGES HIGHER      The dollar touched a near three-week high versus the yen  , supported by the rising U.S. bond yields and as Tokyo  shares rose after business surveys suggested the global economy  was improving.      In commodities trading, copper prices dropped 0.3  percent to $7,299 a tonne, but were supported by the Chinese  manufacturing data that suggested demand from the world's  second-biggest economy and top metals consumer could pick up.        Gold slipped slightly to $1,375.44 per ounce, heading  for a small loss for the week. The precious metal was buoyed by  the China PMI but at the same time pressured by upbeat global  economic data and bets on Fed tapering.      Brent crude prices rose 0.2 percent to $110.06 a  barrel. Rising political tensions in the Middle East and North  Africa have bolstered oil prices this week, even as reports of  some Libyan ports readying for exports eased supply concerns.      "We've got a much better global demand outlook and that's  the medium- to long-term driver for oil prices," added Michael  McCarthy, chief market strategist at CMC Markets in Sydney.  
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