Gold futures fell during the electronic trade following US Fed decision not to inject additional funds into economy amid concerns over the euro-zone. The yellow metal futures for delivery in February lost $20.10 to $1,643 at the Asian afternoon trade, tumbling by 1.2% since opening.
Olympus, scandal camera producer in Japan, announced that it revised financial reports to avoid delisting from the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The company revised reports for the last five years three hours before delisting from the stock exchange. However, officials still can delist Olympus due to financial malpractice.
US consumer confidence increased more than previously projected for the fourth month in line, according to industry data. IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism Index gained 2.2 points to 42.8 this month from 40.6 in November. Experts projected the indicator to add 1.9 points to 42.5 in December.
In November, India's wholesale price index added 9.11% on a yearly basis, said commerce ministry in New Delhi. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted price increase of 9.02%. In October annual inflation was 9.73%. Analysts expect that Reserve Bank will stick to its benchmark interest rate at 8.5% also after policy meeting due December 16.
Fitch Ratings agency revised down debt outlooks for Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Latvia and Lithuania from positive to stable. Eastern Europe are closely linked to economic and financial developments in Eurozone therefore growth prospects have been reduced amid intensified financial stress across the euro region, said Fitch. Slower GDP growth makes it harder to cut budged deficits while uncertainty in EU can boost borrowing costs, Fitch added.
17-nation currency traded 0.2% from 11 month record low against US dollar on Wednesday's Tokyo trade ahead of today's European bond auction. Drop in euro shows investor belief the turmoil is far from being solved, suggest analysts. Euro tumbled to $1.3033 in Tokyo. Consequently Japanese yen strengthened to 2-month high at ВҐ101.61. EUR/USD currently is trading at $1.3045 while EUR/JPY is trading at ВҐ101.68.
US equities dropped for a second straight day after Fed decided to leave its key interest rate unchanged and retail sales rose at slower pace than predicted. Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 0.6% or 66.45 points to 11,954.94, S&P 500 Index lost 0.9% or 10.74 points to 1,225.73, while Nasdaq Composite was down 1.3% or 32.99 points at 2,579.27.
On Tuesday the white house lawmakers voted to approve a workforce tax cut motion which also includes the Keystone pipeline provision. Proposal won with 234 votes for and 193 against. The bill now has to be approved by the Senate. However, President Obama may veto the Keystone pipeline proposal, said the House. Payroll tax extension would prolong 4.2% payroll levity cut which is due 31
Asian stocks fluctuated between gains and losses on Wednesday on speculation that markets already have incorporated all negative news. Shanghai Composite and Hang Seng Index both lost 0.2%, while Japan's Nikkei Stock Average dropped 0.6%. South Korea's Kospi was down 0.1% and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index traded flat.
On Tuesday US equities opened up on higher-than-expected German investor confidence index and as well as on successful domestic bill auction in Spain. Dow Jones Industrial Average added 108.07 points reaching 12,129.46, S&P 500 Index gained 10.96 points at 1,247.43, while Nasdaq Composite jumped 26.81 points attaining 2,639.00
British benchmark index FTSE 100 recovered on Tuesday on better-than-expected German investor confidence data. During the afternoon trade FTSE 100 climbed 0.94% or 50.8 points to 5,478.66. On the upside the index was boosted by mining and energy companies, as Petrofac Ltd. gained 6.19% and Essar Energy added 3.19%. Randgold LTD ascended 1.95% while Royal Dutch surged 1.97%. On the downside was Whitbread PLC
After experiencing loss on Monday, German DAX index opened flat at 5,808.88 on Tuesday morning. However, German benchmark recovered sharply after ZEW reported that investor confidence index for December was higher than expected. Auto producer Volkswagen AG gained 1.6% after the company presented 15% increase in November sales on yearly basis while BMW AG added 1.9%. Adidas AG and Deutsche Telekom climbed 1.51% and 1.31%,
On Monday Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 1.34% or 162.87 points and closed at 12,021.39. 28 out 30 blue chip index companies experienced losses. On the downside were Bank of America Corp. which plunged 4.7% and Intel Corp. which gave up 4% after the company reduced its profit outlook for the 4th quarter. Caterpillar declined by 2.84% and Alcoa Inc. dropped by 3.01%. Art
S&P 500 Index declined by 1.49% or 18.72 points on Monday and finished at 1,236.47 led by banking and energy stocks. US markets reflected Moody's announcement that majority of measures proposed in EU summit are similar to previous ones. Morgan Stanley lost 6.11%, Citigroup Inc. tumbled 5.39% and Goldman Sachs Group traded down 3.37%. Peabody Energy Corp. declined by 5.09%, Consol Energy Inc. dropped by
Japan's Nikkei Stock Average tumbled 1.17% or 101.01 points to 8,552.81 on Tuesday as Fitch and Moody's sceptically evaluated the outcome of previous week's EU summit. Exporters, including car makers and technology stocks, led the drop in the index. Sony Corp. lost 2.6% and Chiyoda Corp. traded down 4.68%. Honda Motor Co. declined 2.9% and Mitsubishi Motor dropped 2.17%. On the upside was Olympus Corp. which
On Tuesday Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index lost 0.69% or 128.49 points to 18,447.17 as disbelief in latest European agreement stimulated decline in the markets. Among main decliners were export dependent stocks with Lenovo Group Ltd. giving up 0.4% and clothing trader Esprit Holdings Ltd. falling 2.8%. Resource companies listed in Hong Kong fluctuated between gains and losses. Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd. dropped 3%
On Tuesday Spanish central bank sold €4.94 bn ($6.51 bn) of 12 and 18-month notes, more than the Treasury had intended to attract. Central bank sold €3.44 bn 12 month notes at an average yield of 4.05%, compared to 5.02% in November. 18-month bonds created average borrowing cost at 4.2%, or 1 percentage point less than in November.
On Monday Canada became the first nation that claimed it will quit Kyoto protocol. Peter Kent, Environment Minister made an announcement of Canada's abandonment after he returned from summit in Durban. Canada, a leading energy producer has complained extensively that Kyoto protocol does not work as it ignores too many important emitters such as India and China.
US retail sales increased less than expected last month, according to official data. The indicator increased by 0.2% on a seasonally adjusted basis in November as compared to 0.6% previously expected, reported the U.S. Census Bureau. On the yearly basis, retail sales rose 6.7% last month after 7.5% increase in October.
Coffee futures increased after approaching to the lowest price in two months due to the cut in the world's coffee production by the International Coffee Organization. On the ICE Futures Exchange, Arabica coffee for delivery in March traded at USD2.2145 a pound at European afternoon trading hours, 0.47% higher since opening.
Saudi Arabia pumped a record high amount of crude oil of 10 million daily while Iran and Venezuela propose to decrease oil output to keep price above $100/barrel. Saudi Arabia cited the increased demand that led the country to pump about 10.047m bpd of crude oil in November. Saudi Arabia increased its oil production to compensate oil supply disruptions in Libya; however, as Libya restarted
Grasberg copper mine, the world's second largest Indonesian mine, moves closer to the end of strike as workers and management agreed on wages. After the strike the global production is projected to increase, thus the copper prices may fall. Moreover, growing concerns over the euro-zone and lower economic indicators of China both weigh down on the commodity price.
China's import of gold from Hong Kong reached 85.7 tons in October compared to 57 tons in the preceding month, reported Hong Kong Census and Statistics Department. Hong Kong remains the largest source of gold for China's mainland. China's gold demand is expected to stay strong fueled by constantly growing gold prices. The average import of gold is likely to grow by 10%
Wheat futures increased after five0day decrease amid lower commodity export-earnings in Australia. On the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, wheat futures for delivery in March traded at USD5.9912 a bushel at the early European trade, edging up 0.69% since opening.