U.K. equities rose extending their gains for a third day as investors wait for the outcome of today's meeting of eurozone finance ministers and U.S. budget-ceiling agreement is awaited to be achieved in the nearest time. The FTSE 100 climbed 0.3%, or 20.84 points, to 6,175.25. All but two groups in the index advanced in the index. Admiral Group shares
Hong Kong blue chips fluctuated between gains and losses on Monday with the Hang Seng benchmark index staying close to its highest level in nineteen months. Hong Kong's gauge reached its highest since June 2011 on Friday amid report that indicated Chinese economy revived for the first time in two years. However, the Hang Seng index closed down 0.05% at
Japanese equities dropped, as the Yen appreciated against the greenback ahead of BOJ's decision on the monetary policy tomorrow. The Nikkei 225 slid from its 32-month high and erased as much as 1.5% to close at 10,747.74. All but one sector in the index inched lower. Oil and gas was the only group that posted gains, as it surged 1.57%.
U.S. blue chips advanced for a third week, as corporate earnings beat the estimates and rising hopes for Congress to agree on the debt-ceiling. However, the lawmakers still remained to different views on raising the debt-limit and reducing the government spending. The Dow Jones industrial Average advanced 1.2%, or 161.27 points, to 13,649.70. Both the Dow Jones and S&P indices
U.S. stocks climbed on Friday extending their gains for the third consecutive week amid higher-than-expected profits of General Electric Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and talks on the debt-ceiling took progress. The S&P 500 index advanced 1% to 1,485.98. All but one sector in the index edged higher with industrial shares rallying the most by 0.96%. Life Technologies Corp.
Most Asian shares retreated on speculation stocks might have advanced too far and too fast. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 0.3% to 132.36 after adding less than 0.1%. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average declined 1.5% as a BOJ's two-day policy meeting begins today. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index gained 0.1%, while South Korea's Kospi Index fell 0.1% and Singapore's Straits
Malaysia's Ringgit declined for the first time in 3 days ahead of a report this week that may indicate consumer prices advanced for the first time since August 2011. The Ringgit traded at 3.0140 per U.S. Dollar, with one-month implied volatility increasing 12 basis points, or 0.12 percentage point, to 5.18%. According to economists' projections, inflation increased to 1.4% in
The Philippine Peso fell amid speculation the nation's central bank will add more measures to manage capital flows. The Peso weakened 0.2% to 40.638 per U.S. Dollar, trimming a two-day gain, with one-month implied volatility held at 4%. The yields of 6.375% government bonds due January 2022 gained 8 basis points, or 0.08 percentage point, to 4.375%.
Australia's Dollar fell for a second successive day against the Yen before inflation data this week that might initiate further interest rate cuts, decreasing demand for the country's assets. The Aussie lost 0.6% to 94.15 yen and traded at $1.0511 after earlier fetching $1.0486 January, the lowest since January 8. The New Zealand Dollar lost 0.8% to 74.85 yen and
Japan's currency recovered from the lowest level in 2 ½ years as the Bank of Japan two-day policy meeting commenced. The Japanese yen has declined 5.9% versus the U.S. dollar in the previous month amid speculation the BOJ will add stimulus to prop up the nation's economy. The Yen gained 0.5% to 89.61 per greenback after earlier trading at 90.25,
Farm commodities apart from sugar finished the week in the green area amid escalated concerns over the US winter-wheat crops and coffee leaf rust in Central America. Strong US grains export data released on Thursday also supported grains. Wheat attained a three-week high on concerns over the US winter-wheat harvest. The US Climate Prediction Center expects dry weather to persist
Energy futures extended previous gains on upbeat Chinese figures. China's GDP expanded by annualized 7.9% in Q4 of 2012 versus expectations of a 7.8% growth. Moreover, the International Energy Agency raised its global demand forecast for 2013 by 240,000 barrels per day, citing robust China' demand. Crude oil edged up on bright demand outlook in China and a recent decline
Industrial metals were mixed on Friday amid dismal US data and positive China's numbers. China's GDP climbed by annualized 7.9% in Q4 of 2012 compared to forecasts of a 7.8% expansion. At the same time, US UoM consumer sentiment dropped to a seasonally adjusted 71.3 in December compared to estimates of an increase to 75.0. Aluminum dipped on an unexpected
Precious metals except for silver snapped a four-day winning streak on profit-taking after weak consumer sentiment data from the US. Meanwhile, market players are likely to remain focused on the BoJ meeting, the Eurozone finance ministers' meeting and the US debt ceiling talks due this week.Gold retreated as investors locked in gains after the previous rally. Weak US consumer sentiment
U.K. Stocks rose extending their gains as the FTSE 100 Index was at its highest since May 2008. The gauge advanced on expanding Chinese economy and better than expected data for the world's largest economy. The Chinese data offset U.K. retail sales figure that fell unexpectedly 0.1% in the last month. The FTSE 100 advanced 0.6%, or 38.73 points, to
U.S. equities rallied, with the Standard & Poor's 500 Index peaking at its five-year high on initial unemployment claims that beat the estimates and better than expected housing data. The S&P 500 climbed 0.6% to close at 1,480.94. All but one sector edged higher within the gauge. Cbs Corp.soared 1.7% to $40.95 as the company's owner revealed its plans to
The Standart & Poor's 500 Index increased by 0.6% to 1,480.94 points in the end of New York trading session on Thursday. The major stock index reached the highest level in the last five years on better than estimated initial jobless claims and data from housing sector. Investors traded with bullish sentiments, as housing starts increased by 12.3% in December
The Canadian Dollar, also called Lonnie, appreciated to 98.58 cents per U.S. Dollar in the end of Toronto trading session on Thursday. The market traded the Lonnie positively and pushed it higher from a two-week low, as data from the largest world economy increased its growth prospects. Canada is the biggest trading partner of the U.S., therefore increasing demand will
The Swiss Franc was lower by 0.7% to 1.2461 per Euro in the end of London trading session on Thursday. This level was the lowest since May, 2011, as the Mario Draghi, the ECB President, said that there are noticeably higher capital inflows in the EU region. The Swiss Franc depreciated by 2% this year, the second largest drop after
Asian shares gained for the first time in 3 days as reports in the U.S. and China overshot economists' expectations and the Japanese Yen traded close to the lowest level in 30 months. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced 1.1% to 134.64. China's Shanghai Composite Index rose 1.1% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index added 0.9%.
Asian currencies set for a fourth weekly advance amid optimism that the world's economy is recovering. The Baht headed for the biggest weekly gain since 2011 and fetched 29.72 per U.S. Dollar yesterday, the highest level in 17 months. India's Rupee climbed to 54.20 per greenback, a one-month high, while Taiwan's Dollar rose 0.3% this week to NT$28.94 versus the
New Zealand consumer prices declined last quarter, which was against economists' expectations of a 0.1% rise, on cheaper imports and sluggish economy, paving the way for the nation's central bank to extend a period of low interest rates. Consumer prices fell 0.2% from the previous quarter, when they increased 0.3%, according to Statistics New Zealand.
German shares were slightly changed as they traded close to their two-week high as growth in the world's second largest economy increased its pace of growth the first since 2010. Growth in the nation revived. The DAX index advanced 0.1% to 7,738.48. The index has gained 1.6% this year. Commerzbank AG advanced the most by 2.17% as an index
Hong Kong shares advanced after Chinese economic reports showed the nation has snapped the declining economic growth which throughout the last seven quarters. The Hang Seng index closed up 1.1% at 23,601.8, showing its highest level since June 2011. Growth-sensitive groups, such as banks, were among the best performing benchmark indices. All sectors edged higher with oil and gas shares