Thursday, August 15, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, dollar lower as investors fret about the Fed

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, dollar lower as investors fret about the Fed
Aug 15th 2013, 08:22

Thu Aug 15, 2013 4:22am EDT

  * Uncertainty over Fed sends dollar, stocks lower      * Nikkei skids 2.1 pct on corporate tax policy      * Unrest in Egypt sends Brent crude towards $111 a barrel        By Richard Hubbard      LONDON, Aug 15 (Reuters) - European shares edged lower from  10-week highs and the dollar softened on Thursday as worries  about the next step in U.S. monetary policy offset a brighter  economic picture in Europe.      Markets have largely positioned for the Federal Reserve to  begin paring back its $85 billion monthly stimulus in September  but conflicting signals from policy makers and mixed economic  data have undermined this view.      Late on Wednesday, the president of the St. Louis Fed, James  Bullard, said he had not yet made up his mind on whether next  month's policy meeting would be too soon to curb the asset  purchases, known as quantitative easing or QE.       "Markets were absolutely convinced we would see about a 20  percent reduction in the run rate of QE in the September  meeting," said Mike Ingram, market commentator at BGC.       In response to the Bullard comments, the dollar at one  point tumbled about 0.5 percent against the Japanese currency to  a low of 97.63 yen. The fall was exacerbated by Japanese   government efforts to stamp out talk of corporate tax cuts which  might have helped boost the world's No. 3 economy.      Against a basket of major currencies, the dollar was  down 0.3 percent, although it is off its lows of last week.      An early end to the Fed's bond buying is expected to boost   U.S. Treasury yields, which should support the dollar, but would  hurt shares and commodities boosted by central bank liquidity.            GROWTH SUPPORTS      Signs of recovery in Europe and growth in Britain supported  the region's equity markets although investors have become wary  over the implications for central bank policy.      German government bond yields hovered around 2013 highs on  Thursday, after money market rates moved higher following data  that showed the euro zone economy had emerged from an  18-month-long recession in the second quarter.      Ten-year German yields were holding at 1.81  percent, heading back towards levels not seen since April 2012.      The prospect of further improvement in the UK economy saw  sterling rise to trade near a two-month high against the U.S.  dollar and hold near recent peaks versus the euro.      Retail sales data for July due at 0830 GMT is forecast to  pick up pace and rise 0.6 percent from a month earlier.      That will follow a string of recent releases - from rising  house prices to a jump in services activity and brighter  prospects for the job market - that have cemented expectations  Britain is on the path to a sustained economic recovery.          In commodity markets, supplies worries related to unrest in  Egypt and the brighter global growth outlook pushed oil prices  higher and keep copper near a nine-week high.      A state of emergency was declared by the Egyptian government  on Wednesday following deadly clashes between riot police and  supporters of ousted President Mohamed Mursi. Investors fear the  political turmoil could choke off routes such as the Suez Canal  or spill over into big oil-producing nations.      "Egypt may not be a major oil producer but the Suez Canal is  an important gateway, not just for oil flows but also for  commodities. If there is any disruption or if the violence  results in the shutting down of the canal, the impact will be  quite severe," said Carl Larry, president of Houston-based  consultancy Oil Outlook and Opinions.       Copper was little changed $7,323 a tonne, while gold   stood near a 3-week high 1,337.69 an ounce.  
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