Friday, October 4, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-U.S. debt row keeps dollar near 8-mth low, stocks subdued

Reuters: US Dollar Report
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
Creating iOS Games: Beginner Course

Marin Todorov teaches you how to create an iPhone game easily and simply using Cocos2d in this $99 online course.
From our sponsors
GLOBAL MARKETS-U.S. debt row keeps dollar near 8-mth low, stocks subdued
Oct 4th 2013, 12:25

Fri Oct 4, 2013 8:25am EDT

  * Euro dips away from 8-month high vs dollar as greenback  edges up      * Wall Street expected to open up, Italian shares outperform  in Europe      * Nikkei hits a 4-week low, BOJ more upbeat on capex      * Bond markets remain largely relaxed about U.S. tensions        By Marc Jones      LONDON, Oct 4 (Reuters) - The government shutdown and  impending debt deadline in the United States kept the dollar  near an eight-month low despite signs of a fight back on Friday  and drove world shares towards a second week of losses.      With no real progress evident in Washington, financial  markets were reluctantly facing up to the possibility the  deadlock could extend to Oct. 17, when the government will  effectively run out of cash.      At the same time, hopes the row could be resolved without a  catastrophe were helped by media reports House Speaker John  Boehner had told lawmakers he will ensure there is no default,  even if it means relying on the votes of Democrats as he did in  August 2011.       "You can see markets are getting a bit more anxious on this  but at the same time you have this possible chink of light,"  said National Australia Bank FX strategist Gavin Friend.      "It would be a kind of makeshift package that buys a bit of  time, a year, maybe less than that, but at the moment the market  would probably settle for that."      Investors were also taking the view that with expectations  of a quick deal currently so low, the only risks over the  weekend were on the upside.       The dollar was up for the first time in six days  before the start of trading on Wall Street where the S&P 500    was expected to bounce around 0.3 percent after its  worst day in over a month on Thursday.       The U.S. shutdown delayed the closely-watched nonfarm  payrolls data, normally out on Friday and a key factor in  Federal Reserve deliberations on when to scale back its  stimulus. The postponement had no noticeable market impact.      Several Fed officials are due to speak later in the day. Two  senior policymakers, as well as the U.S. Treasury and the  International Monetary Fund, warned on Thursday of dire  consequences if the country defaulted on its debt.                 ITALY SHINES      This week's troubles left world stocks on MSCI's global  index heading for a second weekly loss in a row  of 0.6 percent, but analysts saw that as of minor significance  considering their recent strong run.      Asian shares had been led lower overnight by a weak Nikkei   in Tokyo but European shares overcame a  difficult morning to stand almost flat on the day by 1200 GMT.      Italian stocks, up 1.4 percent, enjoyed another  strong day following this week's confidence vote for the  country's fragile government which has cut the risk of snap  elections that would have reignited euro zone crisis fears.      Italy's government bonds also outperformed  leading a broad fall in euro zone periphery yields from Greece   to Ireland.          "We are seeing reduced political risk in Italy following  relief that Letta survived the no-confidence vote," said RIA  Capital Markets strategist Nick Stamenkovic.            THE D-WORD          The focus remained mostly on the dollar, however,  after it hit an eight-month low against a basket of major  currencies on Thursday following a 3.5 percent drop during the  last three weeks of political wrangling.      Hitting the debt ceiling could lead to an unprecedented U.S.  default, an outcome the market assumes is unthinkable.      "By far the biggest risk is Oct. 17. If the debt ceiling is  not raised beyond $16.7 trillion words like default are going to  start rearing their head," said Neil Williams, chief economist  at fund manager Hermes.       "Is the world's biggest economy really going to default on  its debt when the wheels of the Fed's printing presses are still  turning? I highly doubt it."      The euro had looked to be eyeing up its 2013 peak of $1.3711  in Asian trading, but as the dollar began to firm in Europe the  single currency dropped back half a euro to $1.3585.  Sterling also fall 0.75 percent to $1.6041.      Debt markets remained largely relaxed about the U.S.  tensions, and yields, which move inversely to prices, were  slightly higher on benchmark U.S. Treasuries and  German Bunds as U.S. trading started.          Commodity markets remained choppy. Brent crude edged  up 0.4 percent to $109.46 a barrel, reversing a 0.2 percent  decline overnight after slower U.S. service sector growth in  September compounded worries about demand for raw materials.      Gold was broadly steady at $1,312 an ounce while  copper prices stabilised at $7,190 a tonne after  tumbling 1.3 percent on Thursday.  
  • Link this
  • Share this
  • Digg this
  • Email
  • Reprints

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.