Japan's Nikkei Stock Average retreated from yesterday's loss and climbed on Thursday lifted by data which showed unexpected trade surplus in February. Nikkei 225 index gained 0.4% or 40.59 points and finished at 10,127.08. Nevertheless gains were limited as better trade surplus strengthened Yen, harming exporter shares. The main gainers were Oki Electric and Softbank which added 3.9% and 3.4%
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index traded lower during most of Thursday's session but retreated shortly before close and managed to finish in positive area. The index added 0.22% or 44.93 points and settled at 20,901.56. Although PBOC announced Agricultural Bank of China will cut reserve ratio requirement to boost lending in rural areas, stock gains were limited by HSBC PMI
Dow Jones Industrial Average index prolonged its downward movement on Wednesday after Fed's Chairman Ben Bernake warned the crisis has not finished yet in Europe and the region has to put much effort to completely resolve it. Blue chip index fell 0.35% or 45.57 points and closed at 13,124.62. Hewlett-Packard pushed the Dow into red, tumbling 2.2% after company said
S&P 500 index extended loss on Wednesday as data showed existing home sales tumbled 0.9% in February. US index slipped 0.19% or 2.63% points and closed at 1,402.89. Baker Hughes lost 5.8% on news its North American division 1st-quarter profit margin will drop due to higher costs, lower prices and supply shortages as US operators change rig locations. Firms are
Although European financial stresses have eased, the region has to put more effort to completely resolve its crisis, claimed Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernake on Wednesday. He assessed current economic situation across Europe as difficult. Bernake suggests Europe must create a stronger banking system and take steps to boost growth. Moreover indebted countries should work more to reduce their external imbalances.
The GDP of New Zealand grew by 0.3% on a quarterly basis in the last quarter of 2011. The expansion of agricultural and financial sectors managed to offset the contraction of manufacturing activity. However, the figure was below the expectations of the economists surveyed by Reuters who predicted New Zealand's economy to grow by 0.6% in December quarter.
The central bank of Australia and the People's bank of China have agreed on the currency swap deal. The move serves as new example of China's steps to internationalize its currency. The swap deal worth 30 billion Australian Dollars is expected to stimulate trade and investments between two countries, according to the Reserve Bank of Australia.
Gold futures were lower during volatile Asian session on Thursday as traders switched to the riskier assets as US Dollar even despite pessimistic existing house sales data. COMEX gold futures for delivery in April traded at 1,649.65 US Dollars per troy ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange, easing down by 0.04%.
Crude oil futures edged down during the Asian session on Thursday amid reports coming from France that indicated possible oil reserves release in industrialized countries to curb inflation. Light, sweet crude oil futures for May delivery traded at 107.00 US Dollars per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, falling by 0.26%.
US stocks closed mixed on Wednesday trade as home sales dropped and Ben Bernake warned the crisis has not finished yet in Europe. Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.35% or 45.57 points to 13,124.62, S&P 500 index slipped 0.19% or 2.63% points and closed at 1,402.89 while Nasdaq Composite index edged slightly higher, adding 0.04% or 1.17 points to 3,075.32.
Existing house sales in the US decreased more than initially expected last month, reported the National Association of Realtors. The sales of existing homes slid by 0.9%, attaining 4.59 million units on a seasonally adjusted basis in February. Experts predicted the figure to fall to 4.61 million units. However, considering annual changes, the home sales advanced by 8.8% in February.
European equity markets experienced one more choppy session on Wednesday led by banks after Fed Chairman Bernake claimed Europe's crisis is not over yet. Moreover US home sales unexpectedly declined. Stoxx Europe 600 index slipped 0.1%, FTSE 100 index traded flat while German DAX added 0.2%. French CAC lost 0.1% and Italian FTSE MIB index lost 1.3%.
China's retail sales are likely to surge by 15% in 2012, said one government official. Consumption is expected to outplace investment, being the main engine for economic expansion in 2012, according to Chinese Academy of International Trade. Retail sales grew by 14.7% year-to-year over two month before March, decelerating from 18.1% increase in December, reported the National Bureau of Statistics.
Loonie advanced against its commodity-linked counterparts on hopes it will gain from US growth and surging oil prices. Canadian currency slipped versus US Dollar which climbed versus most its peers after home sales data. Loonie added 0.1% versus Aussie and Kiwi to CAD 1.0377 and CAD 0.8094 respectively. It slipped 0.1% against greenback to CAD 0.9922. Currently USD/CAD is trading
China fuelled rural credit by lowering reserve ratios for divisions of Agricultural Bank of China, the country's third largest lender. 565 branches will face a ratio cut by two percentage points and that will free up CHY 23 billion (USD 3.6 billion), People's Bank of China said on Wednesday. The main aim is to support small companies and boost lending in
Japan reported an unexpected trade surplus last month, after facing record deficit in January. The surplus approached 32.9 billion Yens as compared to a deficit of 1.5 trillion Yens in the preceding month, according to Ministry of Finance. The major contributor to the surplus was recovering US economy that spurred the demand for Japan's goods. The exports declined by 2.7%
The preliminary PMI reading from HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics dropped from 49.6 in February to 48.1 in March reaching the lowest value since November and adding pressure on PM Wen Jiabao to implement measures to stimulate growth. A reading below 50 shows contraction.
German DAX index traded in tight range on Wednesday. Car makers and telecommunication companies advanced after upgrades but retreated during the session completely offsetting all morning gains. Metro AG tumbled 4.3% after HSBC lowered stock's rating from neutral to underweight. Adidas AG lost 1.8% after Morgan Stanley cut the share from equal-weight to underweight. At the moment of writing DAX
Crude oil is expected to surge by 30% in case the supply from Iran is halted, claimed Christine Lagarde. Brent crude oil may soar above 120 US Dollars per barrel after total Iranian oil embargo. Christine Lagarde also stressed that growing energy prices will create serious challenges for large oil importing countries as well as are likely to slow down
British FTSE 100 index advanced on Wednesday driven by telecommunication sector but retreated and erased most of its gains during day as data showed UK budged deficit nearly doubled in February. Vodafone added 1.4% after Goldman Sachs reaffirmed its buy rating, while retailer J Sainsbury rallied 3.5% on strong fourth quarter sales. Main downside contribution came from resource stocks as
Indian value of the gold imports is likely to approach 100 billion US Dollars by 2015-2016, reported ASSOCHAM. However, the 4% import duty is not enough to fully control yellow metal's imports and further increase in gold's import tax have to introduced, the report added. Moreover, the India's government may launch public awareness campaign to direct the public savings to
The government of the US allowed 10 EU countries and Japan to be excluded from the Iranian oil sanctions as these countries managed to cut Iranian oil imports essentially. The sanctions are aimed at punishing countries that go on purchasing large amounts of Iranian oil. The biggest oil importers as South Korea, China and India were not exempted from the
Oil futures soared on Wednesday despite a Saudi Arabia's promise to boost its oil production by 25% to offset any supply shortages caused by Iran's oil import embargo. The major contributors to the oil price surge were weaker US Dollar, instability in North Africa and Middle East as well as persistent tensions between Iran and Western economies. Light, sweet crude
Wheat price was pressured by worries over the excessive global supplies due to improved crop conditions in the US. Wheat futures for delivery in May traded at 6.4038 US Dollars per bushel at the early European session on the New York Mercantile Exchange, tumbling by 0.4%.