On Monday, crude was traded lower during European morning trading hours, as the slowdown of Chinese economy buoyed the sentiment. On the NYMEX, December delivery futures for light sweet crude were traded at $92.02 per barrel, which was a 0.3% decline for the trading session. Earlier, prices for contracts fell by 1.05%, hitting a session low of $91.31.
On Monday, copper prices declined to a one-month low in European morning trading session, amid concerns that Chinese slowdown is more severe than expected, and uncertainty over Spanish bailout. On the NYMEX, December delivery futures for copper were traded at $3.691 per pound, which was a 0.3% fall for the trading session. Earlier, it hit $3.646, which was the lowest since Sept. 10.
The Swiss Federal Statistical Office reported on Monday that its PPI grew more than expected, continuing the streak of increases. Producer price index increased to 0.3% on a seasonally adjusted basis last month, compared to a reading of 0.5% in the preceding month. Analysts, however, expected that the index would be equal to 0.2%.
The New York Federal Reserve reported on Monday that its manufacturing conditions index increased less than expected. Empire State manufacturing index advanced to minus 6.2 this month, compared to a a reading of minus 10.4 last month. Economists, however expected that manufacturing conditions would improve more, with an expected reading of the index equal to minus 4.5.
The U.S. Census Bureau reported on Monday that U.S. retail sales added more than it was expected. Retail sales witnessed a 1.1% growth, compared to a figure of a 1.2% gain, which was revised upwards and became the biggest advance since October 2010. Economists, however, expected that retail sales would increase by 0.8%. Retail sales, not including gasoline, building materials, and autos, which is perceived as
On Monday, William Dudley, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, said in his speech that Fed was not going to change its monetary policy, following first optimistic news, and that the policy would evolve only when Fed would be confident about securely established recovery. He explained the decision saying that the monetary policy at the beginning of financial crisis was not aggressive enough
Agricultural commodities dropped on Friday after the USDA released its global supply report, indicating that demand for US exports is slowing. At the same time, broadly weaker US Dollar limited losses of the commodity group.Wheat retreated from two-week high on signs that demand for US exports is weakening. US farmers sold by 8.8% less wheat in the week ended October
Energy futures apart from natural gas faced losses on Friday. The EIA reported that global demand may weaken after supply uncertainties in the Middle East and North Sea lifted energy prices. At the same time, broadly weaker US Dollar limited the downswing of the commodity group.Crude oil eased down on global demand concerns amid inflated prices. Crude oil rallied almost
Industrial metals were bearish on Friday amid persistent uncertainty whether Spain will apply for the next bailout and whether Greece will be granted more time to meet its deficit targets. Meanwhile, market players continued to anticipate key numbers from China scheduled to be released over the weekend. Aluminum extended previous losses as Chinese smelters are expected to continue increasing output
Precious metals fell on Friday despite mounting hopes that global central banks will loosen their monetary policies further. Even weaker US Dollar failed to support the commodity group. Gold dropped by 0.74% despite potential increase in inflation amid global easing measures. Meanwhile, hedge funds raised their positions in the yellow metal to the most bullish in more than a year.
The IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde urged Eurozone leaders to deploy the Euro bloc's bailout funds and the European Central Bank's bond-buying scheme as a part of aggressive plan to solve the Eurozone's debt crisis. Although the head of IMF did not mention any particular country, Spain is the only member on the currency union that is considering whether and
Asian stocks fluctuated as concern that world economic slowdown is putting pressure on earnings was offset by China's exports and inflation data. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index lost 0.1% to 120.70. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average gained 0.4%, while South Korea's Kospi Index declined 0.3%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index slipped 0.1% and Taiwan's Taiex Index fell 0.6%.
U.S. retail sales probably increased in September as demand for cars kept improving, economists said before the data this week. The 0.8% gain would follow a 0.9% increase in August, according to economists' projection. Other data may indicate manufacturing stabilized and fuel prices pushed up the cost of living.
China's exports grew more than expected in September, adding to signs the world's second-biggest economy is stabilizing following a slowdown that started in Q1 of 2011. Overseas shipments rose 9.9% from the previous year, according to the customs administration. A central bank showed that M2 money supply increased 14.8%, the fastest pace since the mid of 2011.
The Australian Dollar stayed lower after a drop at the end of last week ahead of the RBA minutes of the October meeting, which will be realised tomorrow. The Aussie Dollar was close to a 3-month low after the RBA Governor Glenn Stevens said there is scope to further borrowing costs cut. The Aussie traded at $1.0219, after falling 0.3%
The Euro weakened against most of the major counterparts on uncertainty whether Spain will request a bailout and before data that may show investor confidence declined in Germany, the Euro bloc's biggest economy. The common currency lost 0.4% to $1.2902 and fell 0.4% to 101.24 Yen. ZEW Index is due to publish figures on Tuesday, October 16.
China's inflation cooled almost to the slowest pace in 2 years in September, providing the government with a room for policy easing if the economy weakens further after import reported showed domestic demand weakness. Consumer prices increased 1.9% from the previous year, while the producer price index declined 3.6%, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
Confidence among U.S. consumers rose surprisingly in October, reaching the highest level since December 2007, a sign that retailers may see sales improvement soon. U.S. consumer sentiment jumped to a seasonally adjusted 83.1, up from 78.3 in the prior month, beating analysts' expectations of a fall to 78.0. "People expect the economy is going to be healthier next year, they expect their job prospects to
On Friday, the Cable was traded higher versus the U.S. Dollar, amid the stronger Euro. However, concerns about the U.K. economy weigh, and the Sterling underperformed other currencies that are perceived to be riskier. GBP/USD hit a session high of 1.6071 and a session low of 1.6020, subsequently consolidating at 1.6066 by 12:17 a.m. London time.
On Friday, Spanish bonds were gaining, amid speculation that the country will soon ask for bailout, which will trigger ECB's bond buying program. The yield on benchmark 10-year notes fell by 7 basis points, reaching 5.69% by 11 a.m. in London. 2-year bonds declined 10 basis points, having the yield of 3.11%.
On Friday, treasuries edged lower, as demand for safe assets decreased on speculation that Eurozone debt crisis may be resolved soon, and that the U.S. economy is also improving. The yield on benchmark 10-year notes added 2 basis points, reaching 1.69%. The 30-year notes yield added 2 basis points and reached 2.87% by 11:14 a.m. in London.
Wholesale prices rose in the world's biggest economy rose more than initially expected last month, as fuel costs jumped. According to the Labor Department, U.S. PPI climbed to a seasonally adjusted 1.1% in September, after a 1.7 per cent gain in the preceding month. The rate came better than a consensus estimate of analyst' who has predicted a 0.8% gain. "In regards to inflation, we
On Friday, the Euro was traded higher versus the U.S. Dollar on speculation that Spain will soon request for bailout, starting ECB bond purchasing program. The 17-nation currency grew by 0.3% versus the greenback, reaching $1.2964 by 10:10 a.m. in London. Earlier in the week, it fell to $1.2826 on Thursday, which was the lowest since October 1.
On Friday, oil edged higher and was likely to end the week with gains for the first time in a month, as OPEC production declined to the lowest in eight months, and on increased tensions in Middle East. On the NYMEX, November delivery futures for light sweet crude eased $0.21, being traded at $91.86 in electronic trading. November delivery for Brent fell $0.72, reaching $144.98