Monday, September 16, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks & bonds rally, dollar dips as Summers quits Fed race

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks & bonds rally, dollar dips as Summers quits Fed race
Sep 16th 2013, 10:19

Mon Sep 16, 2013 4:11am EDT

  * Dollar falls as Summers drops out of race for Fed chair      * Summers seen as more hawkish than other main contender,  Yellen      * Shares, bonds rally on expectation policy to stay easy for  longer        By Marc Jones      LONDON, Sept 16 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar slid while bonds  and shares rallied on Monday after the withdrawal of Lawrence  Summers from the race to head the Federal Reserve suggested a  more gradual approach to tightening monetary policy.      Further whetting risk appetite was a growing expectation of  a diplomatic solution to the Syrian crisis after a  Russian-brokered deal averted U.S. strikes for now. That helped  propel world shares to just short of a five-year  high.      European bourses were quick to catch on after a strong day  in Asia, with London's FTSE, Frankfurt's Dax   and Paris's CAC 40 opening 0.8 - 1 percent higher to  lift the pan-regional FTSEurofirst 300 0.75 percent.       Summers' surprise decision came just before the central bank  meets on Tuesday and Wednesday to decide when and by how much to  scale back its asset purchases from the current pace of $85  billion a month.      Investors wagered that U.S. monetary policy would stay  easier for longer should the other leading candidate for Fed  chair, Janet Yellen, get the job.       Markets had perceived Summers as less wedded to aggressive  policies such as quantitative easing and more likely to scale it  back more quickly than the more dovish Yellen, who is currently  second in command at the Fed.      "Clearly the dollar doesn't like the idea it could be Yellen  at the helm because of the interpretation that QE (stimulus)  could be in place for longer," said Jane Foley, senior currency  strategist at Rabobank.      "The weakness of data more recently, the retail sales on  Friday for example, has also bought home that we are still a  little way from the U.S. having a resilient recovery ... so I  think Summers's withdrawal has touched a bit of a raw nerve."      It was even possible a first rate rise could be pushed out  into 2016, rather than 2015 as currently planned, added Chris  Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi  UFJ. Going by Yellen's past speeches, he said she would most  probably prioritise reducing the jobless rate.      "Yellen looks like the clear front-runner, and seems to be  the public's popular choice," he said.       "The Fed will shoot to lower the unemployment rate to the  full employment level, and this means the new target could be  more 5.5 percent, not 6.5 percent."            DOLLAR DOWN      The euro was up more than half a U.S. cent at $1.3370  , after hitting its highest in almost three weeks. The  dollar also dropped against sterling and the Swiss franc  .      It proved more resilient against the yen, which was weighed  by its status as a safe-haven, and pared early losses to stand  at 98.72. Liquidity was lacking with Japanese markets  closed for a holiday on Monday.      Stock futures for the S&P 500 and Dow Jones  industrial average climbed over 1 percent to 1,698.30 and  15,376.06 respectively.       MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   gained 1.5 percent to their highest since early  June. South Korean shares added 1 percent, Australia   0.5 percent and Indonesia 1.7 percent.                PUSHING OUT THE HIKE      Sentiment was underpinned by Saturday's deal between Russia  and the United States to demand that Syrian President Bashar  al-Assad account for his chemical arsenal within a week and let  international inspectors eliminate all the weapons by the middle  of next year.       In debt markets, futures for the U.S. Treasury 10-year note   leapt three-quarters of full point following Summers'  withdrawal from the Fed race, a sizable move, as investors took  yields lower.       Cash Treasury paper yields dropped to a  month-low, going as far as 2.8031 percent before edging back up  to 2.8162 percent in early European trading.      The more distant Eurodollar contracts rallied as the market  pared back expectations for how quickly the Fed might finally  start to tighten, as opposed to just tapering its stimulus.      Contracts from late 2014 out to 2016 all enjoyed  double-digit gains suggesting a hike was now considered  more likely in 2015, rather than in late 2014.      The prospect of a more protracted easing cycle would be a  big relief to emerging markets from India to Brazil which have  been hurt by expectations offshore funds would switch to  developed markets as yields there rose.      In commodities markets, gold recouped some of last week's  losses, with the metal rising to $1,327 an ounce, from  around $1,308, while copper lifted off a five-week low.      Oil prices declined as the likelihood of a U.S. strike on  Syria seemed to recede further. Brent crude lost $0.52 to  $111.15 a barrel, while NYMEX crude shed 66 cents to  $107.55 CLc1>.  
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