Tuesday, September 10, 2013

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

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-China data spurs stocks; Syria diplomacy pressures debt, oil
Sep 10th 2013, 20:43

Tue Sep 10, 2013 4:43pm EDT

  * Wall Street stocks rise for sixth straight session      * European stocks rise, Asian shares ex-Japan hit  three-month highs      * China industrial output, retail sales add to optimism      * Oil, safe-haven bonds pressured as Syria worries recede  further      * U.S. dollar near 7-week peak against the yen        By Ellen Freilich      NEW YORK, Sept 10 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks climbed for a  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  diplomatic alternative to a potential Western military strike  against Syria.      The S&P 500 stock index, after suffering its worst  monthly performance since May 2012 in August, is up 3.1 percent  so far this month is currently on its longest daily winning  streak since early July.      Stocks on major markets also advanced with MSCI's world  index, which tracks 45 equities markets, up 0.99  percent, chalking up its longest run of daily gains since  December.      Syria accepted a Russian proposal on Tuesday to give up  chemical weapons and major western powers began working on a  United Nations resolution to create a process for ensuring it  happens, but the United States and its allies remained skeptical  and President Barack Obama kept the pressure on Syria by seeking  congressional backing for a possible military strike while  exploring a diplomatic alternative.      "The sense that we might avoid a strike or 'boots on the  ground' in Syria created a relief rally," said Greg Peterson,  director of investment research at Ballentine Partners in   Waltham, Massachusetts.      The Dow Jones industrial average rose 127.94 points  or 0.85 percent, to 15,191.06 and the S&P 500 gained  12.28 points or 0.73 percent, to 1,683.99. The Nasdaq Composite   added 22.83 points or 0.62 percent, to 3,729.021.      U.S. Treasury debt by contrast fell in price. Benchmark  10-year notes fell 13/32 with their yields rose to  2.97 percent.      "Bonds sold off because people don't need the perceived  safe-haven," Peterson said.      German government safe-haven bonds and gold   and other precious metals also backpedaled.      Oil pulled back with U.S. crude off 2.1 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.      News of stronger-than-expected industrial output and retail  sales in China, added to signs that the world's second-largest  economy was stabilizing after slowing for two years and helped  to bolster  global equity markets as well.      A 1.26 percent jump in European shares followed a  three-month high for Asian stocks.      "The U.S. economy is a little weaker than desired, but the  recovery theme remains in place. Data from China this week show  China might be recovering. If the No. 1 and No. 2 economies in  the world are recovering, that favors riskier assets," he said.      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.       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 1.7 percent rise took its rally  over the last nine trading sessions to almost 9.0 percent.      The cooling Middle East tensions and the better China data  helped the U.S. dollar shake off some of its recent sluggishness  and the euro sidestep some weaker-than-expected French  output figures.       The dollar climbed to an almost seven-week peak against the  yen on Tuesday as easing tensions over Syria and encouraging  economic data from China eroded demand for the safe-haven  Japanese currency.      The yen also weakened to a 3-1/2-month low against the euro,  while the higher-yielding Australian and New Zealand dollars  gained on rising investor appetite for risk.      The dollar was up 0.7 percent at 100.31 yen after  climbing to 100.45 yen, according to Reuters data, the strongest  since July 25.      The euro was up 0.9 percent to 133.08 yen, having  reached 133.29 yen, the highest since late May.      The yen also weakened after minutes of the Bank of Japan's  August policy meeting released on Tuesday showed members were  confident that the central bank's aggressive monetary stimulus  was helping lead to an economic recovery.      The U.S. Treasury sold $31 billion in three-year notes  . It will sell 10-year notes on Wednesday and  30-year bonds on Thursday.            RECORD CORPORATE BOND DEAL      Hedging by dealers and investors preparing for the bond  issue by telecommunications group Verizon was also seen  adding to pressure on U.S. Treasury prices. Verizon's issue will  likely be the biggest corporate bond deal in history.       In a bid to raise money to finance the $130 billion buyout  of its wireless operations, Verizon Communications stuck with  plans to offer investors lucrative coupons.      Verizon Communications' deal received more than $85 billion  of high quality orders for the bond issue on Tuesday.      "Thoughts among market participants is that it could now be  possibly $40 billion or more because it's such a strong order  book," said Matt Duch, senior portfolio manager at Calvert  Investment Management.      The overwhelming response to the offering follows Verizon's  decision to offer bargain basement prices for the notes, to  ensure it raises the bulk of the $49 billion of multi-currency  bonds it needs to help pay Vodafone for its 45 pecent stake in  Verizon Wireless.  
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