By
admin on April 21st, 2011
AP – A rally in U.S. technology shares, spurred by earnings that blasted past expectations, boosted Asian stock markets Thursday and helped drive the Australian dollar to a 27-year high against the greenback.
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By
admin on July 29th, 2009
U.S. stocks fell for a second day as plunging Chinese shares and commodities stoked speculation that the surge in equities has outpaced the economy, while the Treasury sold notes at a higher-than-forecast yield.
Stocks in China plunged on speculation the government will curb inflows into a market that had doubled from last year’s low. The benchmark gauge, which has surged 79 percent this year, tumbled 5 percent to end a five-day, 7 percent advance that pushed valuations to the highest since January 2008.
The dollar advanced the most against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners in almost four weeks as stocks fell and crude oil slumped, bolstering demand for the greenback as a haven.
Crude oil fell the most in three months after a government report showed an unexpected gain in U.S. supplies as imports rose and refiners cut operating rates.
Stockpiles surged 5.15 million barrels to 347.8 million in the week ended July 24, the Energy Department said. It was the biggest weekly increase since April. Supplies were forecast to decline by 1.5 million barrels, according to the median of analyst estimates in a Bloomberg News survey.
Source: Bloombeg.com
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By
admin on June 13th, 2009
The dollar declined against a majority of the most-traded currencies as Brazil and Russia joined China in saying they would shift some $70 billion of reserves from U.S. Treasuries into multicurrency bonds.
The drop in the U.S. currency was the third weekly slump in four against the euro as concern increased that record debt sales and deficits will erode the value of the dollar. The British pound touched the strongest level since December versus the euro, after reports showed U.K. manufacturing rose in April, while the decline of housing prices slowed.
The dollar also declined as traders reduced their bets that the Federal Reserve will start raising its benchmark interest rate from a range between zero and 0.25 percent. Interest-rate futures yesterday indicated a 20 percent chance the Fed will boost its target rate for overnight lending between banks to at least 0.5 percent by its September meeting, compared with 49 percent odds a week earlier.
The dollar weakened after the Russian central bank’s first deputy chairman, Alexei Ulyukayev, said on June 10 that the nation Russia may switch reserves from Treasuries to International Monetary Fund bonds. Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega said his country will purchase $10 billion.
Leaders of Brazil, Russia, India and China, the so-called BRIC countries, are scheduled to meet on June 16 in Russia to discuss their economies.
Central banks’ dollar-selling may help weaken the greenback beyond $1.50 per euro before September, according to Thomas Stolper, a London-based economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Goldman on June 9 advised its clients to buy the euro versus the dollar.
The dollar pared its weekly losses yesterday after Japanese Finance Minister Kaoru Yosano said his nation’s confidence in U.S. debt is “unshakable” and that the currency’s global status is safe. Japan is the second-biggest foreign holder of Treasuries after China.
Source: bloomberg.com
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