Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, dollar rise on upbeat data

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares, dollar rise on upbeat data
Sep 3rd 2013, 08:14

Tue Sep 3, 2013 4:14am EDT

  * European markets open higher; Nokia soars on Microsoft  deal      * China services PMI shows growth after good manufacturing  report      * Yen slips as safe-haven bid wanes, dollar hits 1-month  high      * Oil prices slip on delay in possible U.S. action on Syria      * Australia holds interest rates steady, as expected          By Marc Jones      LONDON, Sept 3 (Reuters) - Upbeat economic data powered  Asian and emerging share markets to a fourth straight day of  gains on Tuesday, while gold and the yen lost some of their  safe-haven appeal as Washington delayed a possible strike on  Syria.      European shares opened higher, helped by a second huge  mobile telecoms deal in as many days as Microsoft   announced a $7.2 billion bid for the phone business of  once-dominant Finnish manufacturer Nokia  .       The dollar was also in a bullish mood, hitting its highest  in over a month against both the yen and the euro   as the prospect of a cut in U.S. monetary stimulus complemented  the flows caused by reduced tensions in the Middle East.      "The Syria situation is clearly a short-term disturbance but  we don't expect it to disrupt the U.S. recovery or even the  European recovery," said Didier Duret Chief Investment Officer  for ABN Amro.      "The volatility we are seeing now is a good period to  accumulate (equities) with the medium-term in mind."       After some choppy initial moves, Europe's FTSEurofirst 300   was up 0.2 percent by 0745 GMT, led by Britain's FTSE  100 and Germany's DAX. France's CAC 40   and Milan's FTSE both lost 0.2 percent.      Earlier MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside  Japan added 0.76 percent, building on Monday's  1.2 percent rise and marking a fourth day of gains.      The Nikkei stock average was the region's standout  performer. It surged 3 percent to a three-week high helped by  the weaker yen, hopes of continued government stimulus and talk  Japan could win the right to host the 2020 Olympic Games.           After Monday's upbeat round of global data, China's  non-manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) dropped  slightly to 53.9 last month from July's 54.1. But it remained  solidly in expansion territory and suggested recent government  measures are supporting the economy.              FLIGHT FROM SAFETY      As investors rediscovered an appetite for risk, gold   eased about 0.2 percent to $1,391.49 an ounce while the dollar  hit a one-month high against a basket of currencies as well as  the yen. The greenback bought 99.70 yen, and the dollar  index  rose to 82.379, also underpinned by U.S.  monetary policy expectations.      "I expect the dollar to be supported amid expectations that  the Federal Reserve will start tapering its quantitative  easing," said Kyosuke Suzuki, director of forex at Societe  Generale in Tokyo.      Traders expect the Fed to start reducing its stimulus at its  policy meeting on Sept. 17-18 unless U.S. payroll numbers due   on Friday fall considerably short of forecasts.      While tapering expectations support the dollar, a near-term  withdrawal of stimulus would weigh on equities, particularly  those in emerging markets that have come under pressure in  recent months on expectations of capital outflows.       "It's not a question of whether the U.S. Federal Reserve  will cut quantitative easing, it's a matter of how much and the  pace of their reduction," said Jackson Wong, Tanrich Securities'  vice-president for equity sales.         AUSSIE BOUNCE      Australia's dollar bounced more than half a cent as  its central bank kept interest rates at a record low 2.5 percent  as expected on Tuesday, saying the level was appropriate though  it could ease again if needed.       While Wall Street was closed for the Labor Day holiday on  Monday, U.S. stock futures pointed to solid gains when trading  resumes later with the S&P 500 contract up 0.9 percent.      With all eyes on what the Fed does with it stimulus  programme, ISM manufacturing data due at 1400 GMT will  be in sharp focus ahead of all-important jobs data on Friday.              The upbeat global manufacturing data continued to underpin  commodities, with copper prices up 0.3 percent at $7258  a tonne, after the previous session's 2 percent rise.      Markets were also unwinding many of last week's safe-haven  trades as worries about an imminent military strike against  Syria abated after U.S. President Barack Obama decided to seek  congressional approval.       Obama's efforts to persuade Congress to back his plan met  with scepticism on Monday from lawmakers in his Democratic  Party, who expressed concern the United States would be dragged  into a new Middle East conflict.       U.S. crude oil prices slipped 0.7 percent to $106.85  a barrel, while Brent lost about 0.2 percent to $114.11.  
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