Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks jump, T-bill yields fall as US leaders say deal coming

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks jump, T-bill yields fall as US leaders say deal coming
Oct 16th 2013, 21:37

Wed Oct 16, 2013 5:37pm EDT

  * Senate leaders announce fiscal agreement has been reached      * Wall Street stocks end up more than 1 pct, global stock  index climbs      * U.S. dollar up against yen          By Caroline Valetkevitch      NEW YORK, Oct 16 (Reuters) - Global equity markets rose  while yields on short-term U.S. Treasury debt fell from 5-year  highs on Wednesday as U.S. Senate leaders announced a deal to  prevent the United States from defaulting on its debt and end  the government shutdown.      U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Republican  leader Mitch McConnell said leaders had come to an agreement,  which will reopen the government that has been shut since Oct.  1, and raise the debt ceiling until February. The House of  Representatives planned to vote on the measure later in the day.         The final passage may come after the Treasury's Thursday  deadline for being able to borrow, but news that a deal had  emerged was enough to soothe markets, which have been roiled by  the Washington impasse. U.S. stocks shot up more than 1 percent,  putting the S&P 500 just below its all-time closing high.      "It looks like we'll get through this, which brings the  (stock) market a bit of a reprieve. Not only is this a relief  rally, but we're still in an environment with a very  accommodative monetary policy, which provides a tailwind," said  Judy Moses, portfolio manager at Evercore Wealth Management in  San Francisco.      Days of political wrangling over the U.S. budget and the  debt limit also sparked substantial preparation by dealers in  government securities for the possibility of a default.      A missed coupon payment would reverberate through the  short-term repurchase market, a key source of overnight funding  for banks and other institutions that depend on the use of  Treasury securities as collateral.       That market was effectively shut when Lehman Brothers  collapsed in 2008 and endured severe strains in 2011 during the  previous debt ceiling crisis.       Some have compared the situation to the extensive  preparations to prepare technology systems for the so-called Y2K  millennium bug in 2000, as well as to the fiscal ceiling debate  in 2012.         "People were staying up all night worried about what would  happen during (the Y2K) deadline. Then nothing happened," said  David Keeble, global head of interest rate strategy with Credit  Agricole Corporate & Investment Bank in New York.            "In this case, all the switching out of T-bills and dealings  with repos would be for naught if we don't default."      The situation also resulted in much volatility in the  near-term Treasury bill market, which is more sensitive to the  debt limit.      Yields on Treasury bills that come due later this month fell  on reports of a deal, after skyrocketing in the morning.  Interest rates of bills that come due in February rose, however,  as issues over the debt ceiling again look likely to be raised  in that month.      Debate over the debt ceiling and reduced activity from the  partial government shutdown are seen as harming the economy just  as the Federal Reserve is likely to begin paring back its $85  billion-a-month bond purchase program.      Yields on bills due on Oct. 24 fell to 0.26  percent in highly volatile trading, after getting as high as  0.72 percent earlier on Wednesday. Rates on Treasury bills  maturing on Feb. 13 rose by as much as 0.14 percent  on Wednesday, up from 0.05 percent on Friday.         Also, the gaps between bid and offer prices in the  short-term rates market and the repo market increased, widening  to about 10 basis points. They normally trade around a  1-basis-point gap. Activity in the repo market was quiet,  according to brokers, because traders were waiting for the  outcome of the negotiations in Washington.      On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average was  up 205.82 points, or 1.36 percent, at 15,373.83. The Standard &  Poor's 500 Index was up 23.48 points, or 1.38 percent, at  1,721.54. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up 45.42  points, or 1.20 percent, at 3,839.43.      The CBOE Volatility index, Wall Street's fear index,  fell 21 percent to 14.71 in its biggest one-day decline since  August 2011.       MSCI's world equity index, which tracks  shares in 45 countries, was up 0.7 percent at 389.82, not far  from a five-year peak of 391.54 hit on Sept 19.      Even though the consensus view among investors had been that  a deal would eventually be reached, investors have had reason to  worry.      The owners of more than 20 U.S. Treasury securities were  seen most at risk, with the Fed almost certainly the largest  holder. For a factbox, see       Citing the debt ceiling impasse, Fitch Ratings late on  Tuesday warned it could cut the U.S. sovereign rating from AAA.      Without a deal on the debt issue, the U.S. government would  by law no longer be able to add to the national debt and would  have to rely on incoming revenue and about $30 billion in cash  to pay the country's many obligations.       That money would run out quickly and the government would  start missing payments in the weeks ahead.             DEAL TALK ALSO BOOSTS U.S. DOLLAR, OIL           The dollar rose against most currencies after the  announcement in Washington. The dollar was up 0.7 percent  against the yen at 98.81. It hit a high of 98.97, the  highest since Sept 27. The dollar index was flat on the day at  80.507 <.DXY, peaking at 80.754, the highest since Sept 18.      Oil prices also rose on the deal talk. Brent crude futures   gained 90 cents to settle at $110.86 a barrel, while  U.S. crude oil futures gained $1.08 to $102.29.       Gold prices edged lower after the news, though losses were  limited as physical buying in Asia and the United States  emerged. Spot gold was down 60 cents, or 0.05 percent at  $1,279.64 an ounce.  
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