Thursday, September 19, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Taperless Fed sends shares surging, yields and dollar tumbling

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Taperless Fed sends shares surging, yields and dollar tumbling
Sep 19th 2013, 08:23

Thu Sep 19, 2013 4:23am EDT

  * Fed jolts by not tapering in protest against higher market  rates      * US dollar, Treasury yields dive; stocks, commodities jump      * Asian shares, currencies benefit as borrowing costs fall  globally      * European markets open 1.2 pct higher, euro at 8-month high        By Marc Jones      LONDON, Sept 19 (Reuters) - World shares and global bond  prices surged on Thursday and the dollar tumbled after the U.S.  Federal Reserve stunned markets by choosing not to cut back on  its asset-buying programme for now.          From London to Tokyo, Istanbul to Jakarta investors  celebrated the prospect of continued stimulus in the world's  largest economy, even though the reasons behind it were concerns  about the strength of U.S. recovery.      The Fed also cut its projection for 2013 economic growth to  a 2.0 percent to 2.3 percent range from a June estimate of 2.3  percent to 2.6 percent. The downgrade for 2014 was even sharper.      MSCI's world share index, which tracks 45  countries, jumped 1.2 percent to a fresh five-year high as large  gains in Asian markets were quickly matched in Europe where the  FTSEurofirst 300 opened up over 1 percent.      The chance that U.S. interest rates could stay low for  longer was further enhanced by news from the White House that  noted-dove Janet Yellen was the front-runner to take over the  Fed when Ben Bernanke steps down in January.       "The bottom line is that the (Fed) meant to send an  extremely dovish message, not only through the lack of tapering,  but also with its 2016 forecasts," analysts at Barclays wrote in  their morning note.      "We have pushed out our first rate hike forecast to June  2015 from March and now expect 10 year U.S. Treasury yields to  end this year at 2.85 percent from 3.10 percent previously."      All of which was a huge relief to emerging markets, which  have been suffering as higher yields in the rich world attracted  away much-needed foreign capital.      The Turkish lira and Indian rupee leapt more  than 2 percent while Indonesia's main stock index climbed 4.8  percent, the Philippines 3.1 percent, Australia 1.1  percent and Japan's Nikkei 1.8 percent.      "Markets are thrilled, and much needed reprieve for battered  EM investors is on its way," said Frederic Neumann, co-head of  Asian economics research at HSBC. "With Chinese data having  turned up, and the Bank of Japan running at full speed, it looks  like Asia might get its mojo back."                   FED PROTEST SEEN      The Fed's decision to keep its asset buying at $85 billion a  month was seen as a rebuff to the sharp rise in Treasury yields  over recent months, which was proving a headwind for the housing  market and the U.S. economy in general.       The bond market got the message and 10-year Treasury yields   tumbled as low 2.675 percent before steadying at  2.704 percent. That was an effective easing in world financial  conditions as Treasuries set the benchmark for borrowing costs  almost everywhere.      "This is a major Fed protest against the tightening of  financial conditions," said Alan Ruskin, global head of foreign  exchange strategy at Deutsche Bank in New York.      "The Fed is very worried that recent tightening of financial  conditions is sizable and, probably more important, the back-up  in yields is too swift to be able to comfortably conclude that  the economy will not slow too much."      Yields on benchmark Japanese debt promptly dropped to  four-month lows while in Europe German Bunds at  1.827 percent saw their biggest drop in yields since August last  year.       The market's pushing back of the likely timing of the first  hike in U.S. rates into 2015 sent the dollar tumbling across the  board. The euro was up at $1.3533 after the early flurry  of European deals, having already gained 1.2 percent on  Wednesday to its highest in almost eight months.      Against a basket of currencies, the dollar lost 1.1 percent  in under 24 hours to hit its lowest since February.      Only against the yen did it show some resilience, as the  Bank of Japan is itself only in the early stages of a  bond-buying programme even larger than that of the Fed.        HEADACHE OR HEADRUSH      U.S. equity investors had set the initial jubilant tone  after the Fed's decision. The Dow Jones industrial average   gained 0.95 percent, while the S&P 500 added 1.22  percent to a fresh all time high.      However, the Fed surprise also created a headache for  central banks in Australia and New Zealand, which would much  prefer their currencies to be weaker.      The Australian dollar surged 1.5 percent to $0.9498,  an effective tightening in conditions that will pressure the  Reserve Bank of Australia to cut rates to compensate.      In contrast, the extension of U.S. stimulus was seen as an  unalloyed positive for global commodity demand, and prices.      Spot gold stormed ahead to $1,370.06, a gain of  almost $70 from early Wednesday, while copper futures   jumped 2 percent to $7,328.      Brent crude added another 34 cents to $110.98 a  barrel, up from a low of $107.64 on Wednesday. U.S. crude reached $108.71 compared with $105.32 early on  Wednesday.  
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