Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-China data spurs stocks, Syria diplomacy cools debt, oil

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-China data spurs stocks, Syria diplomacy cools debt, oil
Sep 10th 2013, 15:02

Tue Sep 10, 2013 11:02am EDT

  * Wall Street stocks advance      * European stocks rise, Asian ex-Japan hit 3-month highs      * China industrial output, retail sales add to optimism      * Oil, safe-haven bonds pressured as Syria worries recede  further        By Ellen Freilich      NEW YORK, Sept 10 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks climbed for the  sixth straight session on Tuesday as the dollar and global  equities rallied on more upbeat economic data from China, while  prices of safe-haven debt and oil slipped on the chance of a  possible diplomatic alternative to a potential Western military  strike against Syria.      After suffering its worst monthly performance since May 2012  in August - the S&P 500 has rallied to a 2.9 percent gain  to start the month, its longest winning streak since early July.      World shares climbed to near a one-month high.      Fears of action against Syria eased after U.S. President  Barack Obama said Monday he saw a possible breakthrough in the  crisis after Russia proposed that its ally Damascus hands over  its chemical weapons for destruction, which could avert planned  U.S. military strikes.      The Dow Jones industrial average rose 110.52 points  or 0.73 percent, to 15,173.64, the S&P 500 gained 10.92  points or 0.65 percent, to 1,682.63 and the Nasdaq Composite   added 19.862 points or 0.54 percent, to 3,726.045.      "Certainly there was the potential for escalation, which was  the market's primary concern," said Tim Ghriskey, chief  investment officer of Solaris Group in Bedford Hills, New York.      White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama would press  ahead with his plan to ask Congress to approve the use of  military force in Syria, despite Syria's recent acceptance of  the Russian proposal.       News of stronger-than-expected industrial output and retail  sales in China, adding to signs that the world's second-largest  economy was stabilizing after slowing for two years,  strengthened global equity markets as well.      MSCI's world index, which tracks 45  countries, was already on course to chalk up its longest run of  daily gains since December, as a 1.2 percent jump in European  shares followed a 3-month high for Asian stocks.      "We had clients buying into the market first thing after the  Chinese data, and they continue to hold their longs (bets on  further rises) as well, so they seem pretty bullish," said Lee  Curtis, a sales trader at City Index in London.      Oil pulled back with U.S. crude off 2.4 percent to  just above $107 a barrel. Crude prices rose 2.7 percent last  week on worry a strike against Syria could spark a wider  conflict and jeopardize supply.      U.S. and German government safe-haven bonds    and gold and other precious metals were  also back-pedalling.      Lower oil prices are supportive for global growth and  usually a particularly positive development for Asia, a region  that relies heavily on imports for its energy needs.      MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   ended at its highest since early June as it  extended its gains for the week to 2.5 percent, while Tokyo's  Nikkei closed 1.5 percent higher.       Upbeat industrial output and retail sales data from China on  Tuesday added to evidence that its economic slowdown may have  bottomed out.       Enthusiasm for hard-hit emerging markets continued to revive  after last week's weaker-than-expected U.S. jobs data muted  expectations about how fast the Federal Reserve would scale back  its stimulus policy.      A Reuters poll on Monday showed economists generally expect  the Fed to announce a reduction in its $85 billion monthly  bond-buying program by just $10 billion.       The MSCI emerging equities index was at a  three-month high as the day's 1.4 percent rise took its rally  over the last nine trading sessions to almost 9 percent.      The cooling Syria tensions and the better China data helped  the dollar shake off some of its recent sluggishness and the  euro sidestep some weaker-than-expected French output  figures.       The dollar rose to a near seven-week high against the yen on  Tuesday as easing tensions over Syria and encouraging Chinese  economic data eased demand for the safe-haven Japanese currency.      The broader currency market trend away from safe-havens sent  Japan's yen back below 100 to the dollar and to a  3-1/2-month low against the euro, while the Swiss  franc also lost ground.      The higher-yielding Australian and New Zealand dollars  rallied as investors' appetite for risk increased.      However, the dollar remained near a 1-1/2 week low against a  basket of major currencies.       The U.S. Treasury will auction $31 billion in three-year  notes on Tuesday at 1 p.m. EDT (1300 GMT). In  "when-issued" activity, traders expected the upcoming three-year  offering due September 2015 to sell at a yield of 0.92 percent.      Hedging by dealers and investors preparing for a record  corporate bond deal by Verizon was also seen adding to  pressure on Treasuries. The company is expected to sell at least  $20 billion, with pricing expected on Wednesday, according to  IFR, a unit of Thomson Reuters.      Benchmark 10-year notes were last down 10/32 in  price to yield 2.96 percent.      The yields have slipped from two-year highs of 3.01 percent  on Friday, after a weaker than expected payrolls report led  investors to believe that the Federal Reserve might cut its bond  purchase program by less than previously anticipated, if at all,  when it meets next week.  
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