Wall Street turned red on Tuesday, as media reports cooled optimism that bold actions will be taken soon in order to boost Eurozone's economy. The Dow Jones Index erased 0.05 per cent to 13,067.18, the Standard & Poor 500 Index declined by 0.04 per cent to 1,384.92, but the Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.12% to 2,949.26.
As reported by the EU's statistics office, the unemployment rate in the Euro-area's 17 countries held at the 11.2 per cent level in June, unchanged from May, the highest level since 1995. The report showed that 17.8 million people are jobless in the Euro-area, with unemployment rate at 24.8 per cent level in Spain, highest among other countries. Meanwhile, the number of unemployed people in
Precious metals apart from gold moved higher on Monday as global easing speculation continued to provide support for the commodity group. However, solid greenback created pressure on precious metal's price. Gold ended the day with slight loss of 0.08% as investors were cautious ahead of two-day FOMC meeting due to start on Tuesday. Silver managed to gain 1.57% on stronger global
German blue chips index rose on Tuesday despite weakness of the other European stock indices. German DAX 30 Index gained 0.43% to trade at 6,806.80 at the time of writing. Bayer added 2.6% after the company upgraded its sales forecast for the current year. Meanwhile, Infineon Technologies soared 7.97% as the Europe second-largest semiconductor producer reduced spending drastically to cope
UK's equities moved lower on Tuesday after disappointing UK consumer confidence data release. However, UK's stocks still receive slight support from speculation that the ECB and the Fed will implement stimulus measures. Financial industry was the weakest in the index, posting a 0.94% decline. Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland and HSBC tumbled 0.91%, 1.41% and 1.14%, respectively. Meanwhile, BP led
Hang Seng Index rose for the third consecutive day on Tuesday on global easing expectations. Hang Seng Index rose 1.08% to 19,796.81. Financial stocks posted the strongest gains after S&P Ratings Services announced that Chinese banks' creditworthiness is strong despite fast growth in banks' overseas assets. China Construction Bank and Bank of China jumped 3.35% and 1.71%. Meanwhile, Hang Lung
Agricultural commodities surged on Monday amid global easing expectations and persistent drought in the US, Russia and Kazakhstan. At the same time, broadly stronger US Dollar weighted down on rural commodities. Wheat jumped almost 2% after USDA reported that Kazakhstan wheat output is likely to decline more than a 50% because of dry weather. Corn soared as the grain commodity is expected
Japan's equities continued to advance on Tuesday as speculation that the ECB and Fed will ease their monetary policies lifted stock prices. However, dismal news from the Eurozone and disappointing Japan's household spending data capped the upswing. Nikkei 225 Index closed 0.69% higher at 8,695.06. Technology stocks were the strongest in the index, climbing 3.01%. Canon soared 5.83%, ending its
Energy commodities, excluding natural gas, posted slight losses on Monday amid appreciating US Dollar and negative headlines from the single currency union. Meanwhile, signs of lower OPEC production limited losses of the commodity group. Crude oil dropped as hopes for stimulus measures from the Fed and ECB failed to outweigh lingering demand concerns. Brent oil lost 0.25% as spreading debt crisis in
Dow Jones Industry Average inched down 0.02% on Monday ahead of two-day FOMC meeting due to start on Tuesday. Negative headlines from Eurozone weighted down on the stock index. On Monday, Spain reported that its GDP continued to contract in Q2. Shares of Chevron edged up 0.51% a day after the company reported that it plans to invest USD2 billion
Industry metals, except for copper, advanced on Monday as potential monetary easing worldwide is likely to boost demand prospects for base metals. At the same time, negative news flow from Eurozone limited the upward trend of the commodity group. Aluminum prolonged its rally on improving China's demand. However, high aluminum production levels in China capped the upswing. Copper came under notable pressure
US stocks started Monday on a positive note amid hopes for easing measures from the Fed and ECB. However, equities drifted lower after release of weak regional manufacturing report. S&P 500 dropped 0.5% to close at 1,385.30. Telecommunications sector was the top-performer, climbing 0.65%. Sprint Nextel advanced 4.64% while Frontier Communications Company remained unchanged. Utility firms also moved higher with
Spain's government has doubled loans for 17 semi-autonomous regions to 41 billion Euros, as local authorities failed accessing capital markets to get debt redemptions, defray suppliers and fund the deficits. Terms of the backstops determine that in the case of region's default government would get repaid before existing bondholders.
The number of jobless people increased by a seasonally-adjusted 7,000 to 2.89 million, the adjusted unemployment rate held at 6.8%, the Federal Labor Agency announced on Tuesday. In July, German business confidence dropped to the lowest in two years amid market confusion and the Eurozone recession. The European Commission estimated a 0.3% decline for Eurozone economy in general.
Italy's jobless rate climbed to a seasonally-adjusted 10.8%, record high since the Q3 of 1999, Istat reported on Tuesday. Italy's economy slipped for a third quarter amid intensifying Europe' debt crisis and Mario Monti's austerity actions, which deepened countries recession. Youth was hit the most, with unemployment among people between the ages of 15 and 24 at 34.3% in June.
On Tuesday, The National Bank of New Zealand reported a net 15.1% of business outlook survey respondents expect economic situation to develop during next 12 month, compared with 12.6% in June. A net 24.0% of enterprises await their own conditions to improve. Net confidence is calculated as the percentage of pessimists deducted from the percentage of optimists.
Three stocks dropped for every two that gained on the U.S. exchanges amid doubts that the two-day rally of S&P 500 had outperformed economic reality. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 0.1% to 1,385.30, after climbing 3.6% in two days.The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped less than 0.1% to 13,073.01.
German retail sales dropped third month in a row in June on concerns about the results of the Eurozone crisis. On Tuesday, the Federal Statistics Office reported that sales, adjusted for seasonal swings and inflation, decreased 0.1% from May, when they tumbled 0.3%. While entrepreneurs' and investors' confidence slipped in July, consumer sentiment is expected to hit five-month high.
Canada's Dollar hit the highest in almost 11 weeks against the U.S Dollar on beliefs that Federal Reserve will act further to boost U.S. economy and ECB will undertake extra monetary stimulus. The Loonie increased 0.2% to C$1.0016 per U.S. Dollar, it buys 99.84 U.S. cents. The last time parity between the two occurred was May 15, when the Loonie
Global grain trade is expected to fall 4.9% in the 2012-13 marketing year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reports. Arid weather from Europe to Australia and the worst drought in U.S. in more than 50 years determines potential decline in grain cargoes and unprofitable rates for cargoes' owners. Baltic Exchange data shows 17% drop in estimated forward delivery agreements for
The Aussie touched a four-month high after a report revealed the number of nation's building permits tumbled 2.5% in June, less than economists estimated. The Australian Dollar rose 0.1% to $1.0517, after touching the highest since March 27. Australia's 10-year bond yields dropped to 3.11%.
Eurozone economic confidence declined more than expected, falling to the lowest level in almost 3 years in July, indicating economic recession extended into the Q3 as policy makers have been struggling to combat the debt crisis. Executive and consumer sentiment index dropped from 89.9 to 87.9 in June, the lowest level since September 2009.
Japan's unemployment rate unexpectedly fell by 0.1% to 4.3% in June, beating economists' expectations, who estimated the rate to remain unchanged at 4.4%. This is an optimistic sign for the Japanese economy, which is struggling with the Yen's strengthening 6 % against the US Dollar since March and curbing export demand due to the Eurozone debt crisis.
South Korea's industrial output fell 0.4% in June for the first time in 3 months, after climbing 1.3% in May. The decline of the industrial production was caused by the worsening Eurozone debt crisis and China's slowing economy, which curbed export demand. Manufacturer's confidence declined to a 3-year low for August, after the slowest economic growth in 3 years.