Posts Tagged ‘Clothing Retailer’
Morning Call: European and US stocks weaken
- European stocks are weaker with the European Stoxx down -0.81% and Sep S&Ps down -2.90 points. The dollar and Treasuries are higher on increased safe-haven demand as stocks falter. European bank stocks are leading financial shares lower after Allied Irish Banks Plc, Ireland’s second-biggest bank, dropped 8.2% after its first-half loss widened as bad debts rose. Standard Chartered Plc fell 6.3% after Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc cut its recommendation on the bank to "hold" from "buy," citing weakness in capital-market related sales and pre-impairment profit that missed forecasts. Next Plc slid 7.4% and led retailers lower after Britain’s second-largest clothing retailer said consumer spending will be "more restrained" in the second half. Limiting losses in European stocks was the 4.0% jump in Electricite de France SA after the French government said that electricity prices would rise 3.4% starting Aug 15. Demand for dollars continues to weaken after the 3-month dollar Libor rate fell for the 16th consecutive session to a 2-3/4 month low of 0.424%.
- The Asian markets today closed mixed with Japan down -2.11%, Hong Kong +0.43%, China +0.37%, Taiwan +0.19%, Australia -0.65%, Singapore -0.43%, South Korea -0.10%, India +0.57%. Asian stocks were undercut after weaker-than-expected US economic data on home sales and factory orders renewed concerns about the strength of the global economy. Japanese exporters were pressured as the yen rose to an 8-month high against the dollar, which threatens to hurt the value of overseas sales when converted to the local currency. Canon, the world’s biggest maker of digital cameras, fell 4.3%, and Sony, which gets 22% of its sales from the US, slipped 3%. Toyota Motor dropped 1.6% and Honda Motor fell 2.2% after the companies posted declines in US auto sales last month of 3.2% and 2.0% respectively. The yield on Japanese 10-year government bonds fell below 1.00% for the first time in 7 years on speculation the strengthening yen will increase deflationary pressures.
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Morning Call: European and US stocks weaken
- European stocks are weaker with the European Stoxx down -0.81% and Sep S&Ps down -2.90 points. The dollar and Treasuries are higher on increased safe-haven demand as stocks falter. European bank stocks are leading financial shares lower after Allied Irish Banks Plc, Ireland’s second-biggest bank, dropped 8.2% after its first-half loss widened as bad debts rose. Standard Chartered Plc fell 6.3% after Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc cut its recommendation on the bank to "hold" from "buy," citing weakness in capital-market related sales and pre-impairment profit that missed forecasts. Next Plc slid 7.4% and led retailers lower after Britain’s second-largest clothing retailer said consumer spending will be "more restrained" in the second half. Limiting losses in European stocks was the 4.0% jump in Electricite de France SA after the French government said that electricity prices would rise 3.4% starting Aug 15. Demand for dollars continues to weaken after the 3-month dollar Libor rate fell for the 16th consecutive session to a 2-3/4 month low of 0.424%.
- The Asian markets today closed mixed with Japan down -2.11%, Hong Kong +0.43%, China +0.37%, Taiwan +0.19%, Australia -0.65%, Singapore -0.43%, South Korea -0.10%, India +0.57%. Asian stocks were undercut after weaker-than-expected US economic data on home sales and factory orders renewed concerns about the strength of the global economy. Japanese exporters were pressured as the yen rose to an 8-month high against the dollar, which threatens to hurt the value of overseas sales when converted to the local currency. Canon, the world’s biggest maker of digital cameras, fell 4.3%, and Sony, which gets 22% of its sales from the US, slipped 3%. Toyota Motor dropped 1.6% and Honda Motor fell 2.2% after the companies posted declines in US auto sales last month of 3.2% and 2.0% respectively. The yield on Japanese 10-year government bonds fell below 1.00% for the first time in 7 years on speculation the strengthening yen will increase deflationary pressures.
Day Trader: Click here to read the complete Morning Call.
Morning Call: Global stocks give back
- Global stocks are mostly lower with the European Euro Stoxx 50 Index down -0.70% and Sep S&Ps down -2.80 points. The dollar and Treasuries are stronger and most commodities are weaker as stocks give back some of Tuesday’s gains. The 10-year Spanish bond yield rose 6 bp after the Bank of Spain said the cost of recapitalizing and reorganizing savings banks would represent 1.5% of the economy. The yield premium investors demand to hold Spanish 10-year bonds instead of benchmark German debt widened 8 bp to 216 bp. Also adding to downside pressure in European stocks was the unexpected -0.5% m/m decline in May German factory orders, their first drop in the last 5 months, as demand for German goods weakened. CRH sank 10% and led construction and building companies lower after the world’s second-largest maker and distributor of building materials said first-half earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization probably fell about 20%, with sales slidin g 10%. Marks & Spencer slipped 3.8% even after the UK’s largest clothing retailer reported Q1 sales growth of 3.6%, beating analysts’ estimates, after it said a proposed increase in the UK value-added tax and other measures to curb the country’s deficit are likely to dampen consumer confidence.
- The Asian markets today closed mostly lower with Japan down -0.63%, Hong Kong -1.13%, China +0.69%, Taiwan -0.19%, Australia -0.50%, Singapore -0.24%, South Korea -0.76%, India -0.81%. Most Asian stocks retreated after yesterday’s weaker-than-expected Jun ISM non-manufacturing index increased concern that the global recovery will weaken. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Index declined, led by losses in Honda Motor and Sony, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index retreated after the head of the National Bureau of Statistics said in the bureau’s newspaper today that China’s economy faces increasing uncertainties and the economic situation is becoming more complex. The manager of China’s foreign exchange reserves said the US bond market is important and changes in holdings of Treausuries "shouldn’t be politicized." The State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) also said on its website that concern China might consider using the "nuclear" option of dumping i ts Treasury holdings is "completely unnecessary." Australia’s Jun building industry index fell -6.8 points to 46.4, its first contraction in 10 months, and a sign that interest rate increases by the RBA are eroding demand for new dwellings.
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