Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar dips, stocks flat as Fed meets on stimulus

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar dips, stocks flat as Fed meets on stimulus
Sep 17th 2013, 15:01

Tue Sep 17, 2013 11:01am EDT

  * MSCI world equity index rebounds slightly as Wall Street  advances      * Dollar dips but remains above four-week low      * Oil drops below $110 as Syrian tensions ease further          By Herbert Lash      NEW YORK, Sept 17 (Reuters) - The dollar retreated and  global equity markets were mostly flat on Tuesday even though  Wall Street advanced, as investors took positions before this  week's Federal Reserve policy meeting that is expected to start  the rolling back of its stimulus program.      The euro rallied against the dollar after a  better-than-expected reading of a German sentiment survey, while  European shares edged lower, pressured by weakness in the auto  sector following a decline in demand last month.      But Wall Street rose, leading a measure of global equity  markets to rebound, after data on U.S. consumer prices added to  sentiment that the Fed will start trimming its bond buying at  the end of its two-day meeting, which begins on Tuesday.      "It seems like now the market is believing that tapering  will be very well managed by Bernanke, that he knows exactly  what the market is expecting and that he's not going to  disappoint," said Jack De Gan, principal and senior advisor at  Harbor Advisory in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, referring to Fed  Chairman Ben Bernanke.      U.S. consumer prices barely rose in August. However, gains  in rents and medical care costs pointed to a stabilization in  underlying inflation that could allow the Fed to begin to scale  back its $85 billion a month in bond purchases.       The Labor Department said its Consumer Price Index edged up  0.1 percent last month after rising 0.2 percent in July. In the  12 months through August, the increase in the CPI slowed to 1.5  percent after advancing 2.0 percent in July.      Economists had expected consumer prices to rise 0.2 percent  last month and increase 1.6 percent from a year-ago.      The euro was last up 0.08 percent at $1.3343. The  dollar was down 0.07 percent versus a basket of currencies at  81.242 and was last up 0.28 percent at 99.34 yen.      MSCI's all-country world equity index rose  0.05 percent, lifted by gains in U.S. stocks, in particular a  1.5 percent rise to $457.05 in shares of Apple Inc.       The Dow Jones industrial average was up 52.65 points,  or 0.34 percent, at 15,547.43. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index   was up 6.22 points, or 0.37 percent, at 1,703.82. The  Nasdaq Composite Index was up 15.91 points, or 0.43  percent, at 3,733.76.       Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 index of leading European  shares was down 0.2 percent at 1,255.93.      Brent crude fell below $109 a barrel as a deal averting any  imminent U.S. attack on Syria calmed fears of a disruption to  Middle East oil supplies and after output resumed at a large  oilfield in western Libya.      Brent crude for delivery in November fell $1.44 a  barrel to a near-one-month low of $108.63.  U.S. crude for  October delivery was down 72 cents at $105.87 a barrel.       Longer-dated U.S. Treasuries prices turned lower, erasing  earlier gains, as higher Wall Street stock prices and weaker  German Bunds reduced initial bids for U.S. government debt.      Benchmark 10-year Treasury notes were flat in  price to yield 2.8625 percent.      Safe-haven Bunds fell after data showed the ZEW German  economic sentiment survey for September rose to 49.6 from 42.0  in August, significantly above the 46.0 consensus forecast.         Bund futures were last 49 ticks lower on the day at  138.01.  
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