Thursday, August 22, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares take heart from upbeat data

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian shares take heart from upbeat data
Aug 23rd 2013, 04:05

Fri Aug 23, 2013 12:05am EDT

  * MSCI Asia-Pacific index rises 1 pct      * Moves off Thursday's six-week intraday low      * Nikkei surges as yen weakens to more than two-week low vs  dollar      * Upbeat manufacturing data hints at recovering global  economy      * Concerns remain about impact of Fed stimulus withdrawal          By Lisa Twaronite      TOKYO, Aug 23 (Reuters) - Asian shares rebounded on Friday  as economic data suggesting the global economy is expanding took  the edge off persistent fears that the U.S. Federal Reserve will  likely start withdrawing stimulus next month.        MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   added 1 percent, bouncing decisively off a  six-week low touched on Thursday. Japan's Nikkei stock average   outperformed, surging 2.4 percent, as a weaker yen gave  a tailwind to exporters' shares.          Asian gains tracked those in overseas markets in the  previous session. European shares registered their best session  since early this month and all three U.S. indexes ended higher  despite a system glitch that stopped trading of more than 3,000  Nasdaq-listed shares for almost three hours.      Purchasing managers surveys showed better-than-expected  growth in the euro zone, a Chinese manufacturing rebound and  U.S. manufacturing activity rising to a five-month high this  month.       "These are positive catalysts as those countries are Japan's  major export markets," said Toshihiko Matsuno, senior strategist  at SMBC Friend Securities In Tokyo.      "Yesterday's upbeat China PMI data soothed the mood while  some investors were frustrated over concerns regarding emerging  countries. And therefore investors were not ready to turn 'risk  on' yet. The data from the U.S. and Europe reassured them," he  said.      U.S. Labor Department data also showed new claims for  jobless benefits held near a six-year low last week, adding to  signs that the U.S. labour market is stabilising.         But the brighter U.S. data had a dark underbelly that some  strategists said would limit market gains, as it reinforced  expectations that the economy is strong enough for the Fed to  begin tapering its quantitative easing (QE) as early as next  month. That could draw more capital out of emerging countries,  whose markets have felt the pinch in recent sessions.       Singapore Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said on  Friday 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.      Some Asian investors are betting that North Asian currencies  such as the South Korean won and the Taiwan dollar will fare  better than their Southeast Asian counterparts as the Fed pares  its stimulus.       The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) rose  1.2 percent, as fears about the impact of Fed policy on emerging  markets eased.       "The market is responding well to the upbeat U.S. and  European data, while concerns about India and Indonesia have  eased," said Samsung Securities analyst Lim Soo-gyun.               DOLLAR EDGES HIGHER      The dollar rose about 0.1 percent against a basket of  currencies to 81.551. On Thursday, it broke through initial  resistance at 81.604, its 200-day moving average, to hit a  one-week peak of 81.719.      The dollar rose 0.3 percent against the Japanese currency   to 98.96 yen after hitting 99.10 yen earlier on the EBS  trading platform, its highest since Aug. 5, while the euro   slipped about 0.1 percent to $1.3349.      In commodities trading, copper prices added 0.1  percent to $7,330 a tonne, 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 $1,376.41 per ounce, headed  for a small loss for the week. The precious metal was also  buoyed by the China PMI but was at the same time pressured by  upbeat global economic data and expectations that the U.S.  Federal Reserve will soon taper its stimulus.      Brent crude prices rose 0.3 percent to $110.18 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.  
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