Posts Tagged ‘Libor Rate’
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.
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Barchart.com U.S. Morning Call for Friday, May 28, 2010
- Global stocks are mostly higher with the European Euro Stoxx 50 Index up +0.26% and June S&Ps up +0.30 of a point. The euro strengthened for a second day and most commodities rallied, as crude oil and copper climbed to 1-1/2 week highs. Daimler AG rose 2% and is leading automakers higher after the world’s second-largest luxury carmaker raised its profit forecast for its Mercedes-Benz division for the second time in 6 weeks as the global recovery spurs demand. Daimler now expects full-year earnings for its Mercedes-Benz unit to be at the “upper end” of the carmaker’s target of 2.5 billion euros ($3.1 billion) to 3 billion euro range, and its Q2 Ebit will exceed the Q1 total of 806 million euros. Daimler’s CEO said deliveries of Mercedes-Benz vehicles to China more than doubled in Q1 and China has now become Mercedes-Benz cars’ third-largest sales market. Travis Perkins jumped 8.1% after it made a 553 million-pound ($806 million) takeover offer for B SS Group in an attempt to create the UK’s largest plumbing and heating materials chain, and Opap SA rose 3.7% after Europe’s largest publicly traded gambling company reported Q1 net income of 192.2 million euros, beating analysts’ estimates of 182 million euros. Liquidity concerns eased slightly after the 3-month dollar Libor rate dropped to 0.536% from 0.538% and the dollar Libor-OIS spread, a gauge of banks’ reluctance to lend, narrowed to 30.4 bp from 30.8 bp.
- The Asian markets today closed mostly higher with Japan up +1.28%, Hong Kong +1.73%, China -0.34%, Taiwan +0.72%, Australia +1.79%, South Korea +1.08%, India +1.18%. Asian stocks received a boost after St. Louis Fed President Bullard said the debt crisis is likely to be contained in Europe as US and Asian growth protects them from contagion. Japanese exports gained as the yen weakened to a 1-week low against the dollar with Nintendo ending 2.8% higher and Sony closing with a 1.8% gain. The April Japan jobless rate unexpectedly rose +0.1 to 5.1%, April Japan overall household spending unexpectedly fell -0.7% y/y, and deflation deepened with the April Japan national CPI ex fresh food falling a more than expected -1.5% y/y, signaling domestic demand is restraining the nation’s recovery. In another sign of economic uncertainty, the April Japan job-to-applicant ratio unexpectedly fell -0.01 to 0.48, meaning there are 48 jobs for every 100 candidates, its first deteriorati on in 8 months.
- June S&Ps this morning are trading little changed, up +0.30 of a point. The US stock market yesterday trended higher the entire session and finished sharply higher (Dow Jones +2.85%, S&P 500 +3.29%, Nasdaq Composite +3.73%). Bullish factors included (1) carry-over support from a sharp rally in European bourses after China affirmed its commitment to investing in Europe, which was a boost of confidence for the euro, (2) comments from St. Louis Fed President Bullard who said that Europe’s sovereign debt crisis is likely to be contained within the Euro-Zone as the recovery trajectory in the US and Asia protects them from contagion, (3) strength in energy and raw-materials producers after the weaker dollar prompted a rally in most commodities, and (4) a rally in technology stocks led by gains in Microsoft after the company was upgraded to “outperform” from “market perform” at FBR Capital Markets.
- Bearish factors included (1) the unexpected downward revision to US Q1 GDP to 3.0% from 3.2% (versus expectations of an increase to 3.4%), and (2) the slightly smaller-than-expected drop in weekly initial unemployment claims (-14,000 to 460,000 versus expectations of -16,000 to 455,000).
- Apple (AAPL) climbed 1.5% in European trading as its iPad tablet computer went on sale outside of the US.
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