Senin, 21 Mei 2012
Stocks Rally, China Hints At Stimulus: Daily Markets Wrap
By IBtimes Staff Writer
Strained relations between Germany and France became apparent Monday,
when the finance ministers from both countries failed to resolve whether
the euro zone would benefit from issuing joint European bonds. Berlin
rejected the idea, stipulating that struggling economies must deal with
economic mistakes before being given a reason not to. Paris, taking the
side of stimulus spending under its new socialist leadership, said bonds
should be issued now in order to raise funds to create jobs. The
disagreement set the stage for Wednesday's informal E.U. summit in
Brussels.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao's comment that his government is considering
policies to promote economic growth was received as a sign Beijing is
considering measures to counteract slowing industrial production. The
comment was interpreted by market watchers as a sign China would
consider further reductions in banks' minimum reserves. China has said
it's committed to maintaining a minimum 7.5 percent growth for the year;
anything below 7 percent would be considered a hard landing that would
rile global markets.
Markets appeared indifferent to the weekend G-8 summit where leaders
agreed it was in everyone's best interest that Greece remain in the euro
zone. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all
closed up -- the latter closing up above 2 percent -- as stocks
rebounded from the worst week so far this year.
Stocks. Most major world markets were up; the ones that fell were down
slightly. Sectors that exhibited strong performance in the U.S. included
basic materials, capital goods, energy and technology. The stock price
of Irish electrical equipment manufacturer Cooper Industries plc (NYSE:
CBE) shot up more than 25 percent after power manager Eaton Corp. (NYSE:
ETN) of Cleveland announced it would buy the company for $11.8 billion
in cash and stock. A big loser was Lowe's Companies Inc. (NYSE: LOW),
which saw its stock price fall 10 percent after the company downgraded
its annual earnings-per-share estimate.
Bonds. U.S. benchmark 10-year note yields rose slightly, indicating a
cautious return to investing in stocks. The Spanish 10-year bond fell
slightly to 6.3 percent after climbing to its highest level since late
November. Italy's 10-year note dropped to 5.83 percent, the lowest level
since late January. The benchmark German bund yield dipped to the
near-record low it struck last week before rebounding to a flat 1.47
percent.
Currencies. The euro climbed back from a four-month low against the
dollar after reassuring statements out of Germany and France that the
two countries are committed to keeping Greece in the currency bloc. The
euro drilled down below $1.27 last week for the first time since
mid-January. India's rupee found a new low against the dollar for the
fourth consecutive session, as the currency continued to face the brunt
of global uncertainty.
Commodities. The S&P GSCI Spot Index of 24 commodities has continued
its downward march, erasing year-to-date gains and hitting its lowest
level since October. Oil rose for the first time in seven sessions on
the news China was likely to implement policies to maintain growth. Oil
for June delivery rose slightly. Natural gas for June delivery fell 3.7
percent on expectations that warmer- than-usual weather would reduce
short-term demand to an extent that supplies in the fall would be near
capacity. Gold for June delivery registered its first loss in three
trading sessions.
http://www.ibtimes.com/ articles/343612/20120521/ daily-markets-wrap.htm
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