The Euro Stoxx 50 Index futures, a benchmark for the Euro area markets, were higher by 0.2% to 2,653 points in very beginning of European trading session. Markets showed positive sentiments, as Standard & Poor's improved Greece's credit rating to B- and changed an outlook to stable. Also, markets awaited economic German and American reports. Moreover, the U.S. lawmakers showed
S&P/ASX 200 Index increased by 0.46% to 4617.80 points in Sydney trading session on Wednesday. Today's positive performance extends the previous session's gains, what brings the index to a 16-month high or a level last time seen in July, 2011. The index set on a positive track, as seven days out of nine showed gains. All sectors were green, including
Mexican minimum wage commission, including governors, business and labor unions representatives, agreed to raise a minimum wage by 3.9% in the beginning of 2013. However, this increase brings the wage just under $5.1 or 65 Pesos a day in the best paid areas, which includes major cities and the capital. The minimum wage was well below the market wage for
The Hang Seng Index was higher by 0.4% to 22,589.50 points and the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index increased by 0.6% to 11,371.02 points on Wednesday trading session in Hong Kong. Equities posted modest gains following a positive performance from the U.S. markets and optimism over the fiscal cliff talks. Most attention attracted HSBC Plc shares and Esprit Holdings Ltd,
Rural commodities except for wheat moved lower on Tuesday amid weak demand for US supplies. Grain and oilseed markets were dragged down by a cancellation of 420,000 tonnes of soybean orders from the US. Meanwhile, rising coffee and sugar production in Brazil continued to weight on softs. Weaker US Dollar and signs of better demand for wheat were the only
Energy futures rallied on Tuesday amid broadly weaker US Dollar. Moreover, hopes that the US lawmakers will agree on the next year budget and will manage to avoid deep recession next year boosted demand for riskier assets. Crude oil jumped on brighter demand outlook as the US is expected to avert so-called fiscal cliff while Japan is likely to ease
Base metals apart from nickel dipped on Tuesday as traders were cautious ahead of the key US data releases due later in the week. Bloated LME inventories as well as uncertainty over the Eurozone's demand pushed the industrial metals lower. However, hopes for progress in the US budget talks capped losses.Aluminum dipped on record LME inventories. Aluminum stocks advanced by
Precious metals were bearish on Tuesday as mounting hopes that the US lawmakers will manage to avert fiscal cliff spurred demand for riskier assets thus weighting on precious metals. At the same time, expected easing in Japan coupled with softer greenback were supportive for the commodity group.Gold dropped as investors shunned safe-haven assets amid expectations that the US will avoid
Asia's second largest economy recorded a 953.4 billion yen merchandise trade deficit in November, when it declined by 37.9% from a year ago amid weaker exports to China, the Ministry of Finance reported on Wednesday. Year-on-year, Japan's exports decreased 4.1% to 4.983 trillion Yen beating a forecast of 5.5% contraction following a previous month's 6.5% shortfall.
The 17-bloc nation's currency gained against the U.S. Dollar and Japan's Yen together with modest advance of European shares as the Bank of Japan is expected to boost the economy using unlimited monetary stimulus and as fiscal cliff talks are closer to reaching a deal. London's FTSE, Frankfurt's DAX and France's CAC indexes rose in a range of 0.2% to
Global economy's weak performance did not stop the World Bank from increasing its growth outlook of advanced economies in the East Asia and Pacific as improving domestic demand is helping the countries contribute on global growth this year with nearly 40%. The region is projected to expand 7.9% in 2013 following a 7.5% acceleration recorded this year.
Gold recorded gains and rebounded from its three-month low as bearish bets of investors were stopped by optimism burst to the market after U.S. lawmakers proceeded in new budget talks to avoid automatic tax hikes and spending cuts. Gold rose 0.3% to $1,676.85 an ounce on Tuesday following a fall to its lowest level since the end of August at
Wall street edged higher on upbeat Tuesday as investors confidence on fiscal cliff agreement rose after U.S. lawmakers came closer to reaching a deal in order to avoid tax increasing and spending cuts. The S&P 500 recorded its first two-straight-day gain bigger than one percent since July, when it advanced 1.15% to 1,446.79, while the Nasdaq Composite went up 1.46%
Oil rose on Tuesday on confidence the U.S. will reach compromise on the country's budget, easing concerns of looming ‘fiscal cliff' in the world's largest crude consumer's economy. Light, sweet crude for January settlement was at 87.93 dollars a barrel, up 73 cents or 0.84%. Brent for February delivery was up 1.20 dollars or 1.11% at 108.84 dollars a barrel.
Japan's leading index increased more than expected in October, according to data from the Cabinet Office on Wednesday. The leading index, which measures the economy's direction in the months ahead, rose to 92.8 in October compared with 92.5 in a preliminary report, following September's gauge at 91.3. Meanwhile, the lagging index was revised down from 87.2 to 86.8 in October.
Rating agency Standard & Poor's raised Greece's credit rating on Tuesday by six notches from ‘selective default' to ‘B-‘, praising a successful completion of the debt buyback programme and European leaders' decision to release bailout funds to Greece. The rating agency cut Greek ratings to ‘SD' on December 5, as the government encourage private bondholders to take part in the
Asian shares rose, with the regional benchmark index poised for the highest close since 2011, on optimism U.S. officials will reach a budget compromise and the BOJ will expand stimulus. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced as much as 1% to 129.12 at 1:55 p.m. Tokyo time. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average gained 1.7% to 10,091.40, the highest since April.
The Australian Dollar fell for a third straight day versus the U.S. Dollar amid concern the South Pacific country's economy is slowing. The Aussie weakened as much as 0.2% to $1.0515 at 4:11 p.m. Sydney time, having declining 0.3% in the previous 2 days. The currency lost 0.1% to 88.62 yen. The New Zealand Dollar slid 0.3% to 83.94 U.S.
The Japanese Yen weakened to the lowest level versus the Euro since August 2011 on speculation the nation's central bank will extend policy easing at a meeting, which starts today. The Yen touched 111.71 per Euro, the lowest level since August 30, 2011, before fetching 111.65 at 1:24 p.m. Tokyo time, 0.2% below the close yesterday. It declined 0.1% to
Japan's Nikkei hit its highest level in more than an 8-month period for a second day in a row on Tuesday as Sunday's election victory of the conservative Liberal Democratic Party increased the possibility of further monetary easing in Japan in order to boost the economy. Increasing optimism on U.S. budget talks also added to the positive mood of investors resulting in
The Eurozone currency hit its highest level in more than seven months against the U.S. Dollar amid growing investors optimism, after the U.S. lawmakers came closer to reaching an agreement in fiscal cliff talks and an improvement in situation on European markets lifted share prices up. The Euro was traded close to a 7-1/2- month high at $1.3191 earlier on
The Reserve Bank of India held its benchmark interest rate and the cash reserve ratio at the same level, despite the fact the wholesale price inflation has been slowing down faster than forecast, when it dropped from 7.45% in October to 7.24% the following month. India's central bank left its cash reserve ratio at 4.25%, the repo rate at 8%
Advanced economies will beat analysts' expectations made earlier in October, when they are projected to grow at a faster pace in 2013 together with better performance of the global economy, the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund said on Sunday. Developed countries will expand 1.6%, compared to a 1.5% growth initially projected, while the global economy will rise at a rate of 3.6%
U.K. inflation remained at the highest rate last month since May with the largest upward pressures came from electricity and gas prices as well as food & non-alcoholic beverages, which kept consumer-price growth above the BOE' target of 2%. The CPI annual inflation was unchanged at 2.7% in November 2012, according to the Office for National Statistics. "Consumers' spending power is