West Texas Intermediate oil contracted on Friday after the U.S. government data unveiled that the country's employers hired fewer number of workers than expected in March. WTI for delivery in May dropped 1.5% to $91.91 a barrel on the NYMEX after it was traded at $92.55 earlier on Friday, while Brent crude traded in London edged down 1.3% to $104.92
The Canadian currency continued to decline against its U.S. counterpart after a report showed an unexpected drop in jobs, the largest since June 2012, as the unemployment rate rose from 7% to 7.2% last month. The so-called Loonie edged lower 0.8% to C$1.0212 earlier on Friday recording the biggest decrease since June 28, one Canadian Dollar buys 97.92 U.S. cents.
U.S. Treasuries continued to rise on Friday after a local report showed that the country's payroll increased by 88,000 workers in March recording the lowest gain in nine months bringing up concerns that the world's largest economy is slowing. The benchmark 10-year yields decreased 0.06 percentage points to 1.70% after it reached its lowest since December 12 at 1.68.
The Dollar Index dropped on Friday after it was near its highest level in an eight-month period after the U.S. report showed that employers in the country hired fewer workers than forecast in the month of March signalling that the U.S. economic growth is slowing. The Dollar Index edged lower 0.2% to 82.529 earlier on Friday after it touched its
European equities were little changed on Friday after it recorded its biggest two-day drop in four months before a report showed that U.S. employers hired 190,000 people in March and the jobless rate stayed flat at 7.7%. The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index decreased 0.1% to 291.33 earlier on Friday London session following a 2% fall in the previous two
Japanese equities surged on Friday amid the Bank of Japan's announcement about its new stimulus programme to end a two-decade deflation of the economy. The BOJ plans to double the monetary base in the next two years. The Nikkei 225 added 1.6%, or 199.10 points, to 12,833.64, reaching its highest value since September 2008. 138 out of 225 companies included
Emerging-market shares dropped to its lowest level in four months pushing the MSCI BRIC Index down by 10% from this year's high as concerns about bird flu infection having an impact on Chinese airlines widened and as conflict between South and North Korean spurred capital outflows from South Korea. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index declined 0.9% to 1,007.80 falling for
U.S. blue chips advanced on Thursday, as central banks started talks on new stimulus programs to boost the economic growth. The Dow Jones Index rose 0.4% to 14,606.11 points, despite disappointing data on the U.S. economy. Eight out nine sectors in the index increased with telecommunications and financials adding 1.1% and 0.9% for the two biggest increases on Dow. 24
Farm commodities were mixed on Thursday amid broadly weaker US Dollar and unfavorable weather conditions in Argentina. Rising ethanol prices as well as uncertainty over Central American coffee crop supported softs. At the same time, improved weather in the US as well as weak demand for US exports sent grains lower. Wheat dropped after the USDA data showed U.S. wheat-export
Energy futures except for natural gas finished in the negative area on Thursday as weak US jobs market data raised concerns over energy demand prospects. Moreover, a recent bearish EIA report continued to push oil prices lower. Crude and Brent oil tumbled as market players were cautious that Friday's jobs report may disappoint. Oil futures also were depressed by a recent
Base metals apart from nickel advanced on Thursday despite worries over rising global inventories and weak China's demand. However, industrial metals found support on Mario Draghi comments that the ECB will continue its easing measures as long as needed. Aluminum climbed as cancelled warrants at the LME continued to rise, indicating strong spot demand. Adding to gains, stockpiles at the LME
Precious metals declined amid signs of weakening investment demand. At the same time, precious metals pared losses after the ECB President Mario Draghi said that the monetary policy will remain loose as long as needed. Moreover, disappointing US jobless claims data lent support to the commodity sector. Gold traded lower as holdings of gold-backed ETPs stood at 2,435.35 metric tonnes on
European stocks retreated on Thursday amid negative data on the U.S. economy and Draghi's woes over the Eurozone's debt crisis. The DAX Index decreased 0.7%, or 47.16 points, to 7,879.23. The leading sectors were telecommunications and health care that added 2.2% and 1.7%, respectively. Fresenius Medical Care AG & Co KGaA surged 4.1% to 56.25 euros, as the company's shareholders
U.K. equities declined on Thursday, as the ECB President Mario Draghi said the Euro area's economic recovery may be at risk. In addition, the U.S. jobless benefit claims increased in March. The FTSE 100 Index lost 1% to 6,353.33 points, the biggest two-day decline in nearly five months. Only sector posting gains was basic materials that added 0.5%. Vedanta Resources
Italy's property prices decreased at a significantly faster pace in the last three months of 2012 as the house price index dropped for the fourth month in a row, a data unveiled by the statistical office Istat showed on Thursday. The house price index slipped 4.6% annually in the Q4 following a 3.8% decline in the prior quarter, while overall
The British currency decreased to its weakest in two weeks versus the U.S. Dollar on Thursday amid speculations that the Bank of England decides to add more stimulus measures at a policy meeting on Thursday. The Pound dropped 0.5% to $1.5048 earlier on Thursday London session following a fall to the lowest since March 20 at $1.5034, while it was
Japanese shares rallied the most in two months as the Yen depreciated against its major peers after the Bank of Japan made its first policy decision under the leadership of Haruhiko Kuroda, the new governor, to double monthly bond purchasing. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average advanced 2.2% to close at 12,634.54 with a trading volume above its 30-day average. All
U.S. stocks declined yesterday, as the nation's employers hired less-than-estimated workers in March and non-manufacturing businesses, covering nearly 90% of the world's largest economy, dropped to 54.4 the last month compared to a rate of 56 in February. The Dow Jones Industrial Average extended its decline for the week and retreated 0.8%, or 111.66 points, to end at 918.71. All
Wall Street finished red on Wednesday, with the Standard & Poor's 500 Index falling down from a record high led by financial and energy stocks. In addition, worse-than-expected data on the world's largest economy also fueled concerns over U.S. economic growth perspectives. The S&P 500 slipped 1.1% to 1,533.69 for the biggest drop in more than month. All ten groups
Emerging-market shares continued to decline on Thursday pushing down the benchmark index of the region to the weakest level in two weeks amid political tension in Thailand and as conflict between North and South Korea escalated. The MSCI Emerging Market Index decreased by 0.5% to 1,019, while South Korean Kospi Index slipped 1.2% and Thailand's Set Index contracted 1.6% on
Gold continued to decline on Thursday extended its series of losses after it was bullish for 12 years amid concerns that investors tend to seek for higher return in riskier assets as the global economy is recovering. Bullion for delivery in April dropped 1% dropping to its weakest since May 30 at $1,541.82 an ounce after it was traded at
European equities increased on Thursday with the Stoxx Europe 600 Index rebounding from the largest drop in five weeks after the Bank of Japan's new Governor announced another stimulus measures in order to end a 15-year period of deflation in the country. The benchmark Euro Stoxx 50 Index futures added 0.3% to 2,584 earlier on Thursday London session.
West Texas Intermediate oil was traded close to its lowest level in more than seven days on Thursday after inventories in the U.S., the world's largest oil consumer, climbed to the strongest figure in 22 years. May WTI futures were at $94.46 a barrel on the NYMEX after it dropped $2.74 to $94.45 yesterday, the lowest price since March 22.
The Australian currency was little changed on Thursday rising for a fourth straight day after a report showed that retail sales in the country advanced by 1.3% in February recording its biggest gain in a three-year period. The so-called Aussie increased 0.5% against the U.S. Dollar in last four session and was traded at $1.0454 at 4:13 p.m. Sydney time