Asia slips back on Japan export
DAILY MARKET REVIEWS
by Arne Treholt Vice-President of Business Development and Investments
Asian stocks slipped back after Japan’s export fell an annual 8,1 percent in July. Collapsing shipments to Europe and a steep fall in sales to China caused the deepest drop in export in six months. The Japanese yen strengthened against the dollar trading at 79,28. The South Asian Pacifix index, MSCI fell 0,7 percent. The US-markets rallied during the first part of the session, but fell back from record highs. Standard and Poor’s 500 index rose to a four year high before slipping back into red.
The Euro/USD jumped back to a high on 1.2488 on expectations that the European Central Bank, ECB, will act to rein in surging borrowing costs. The interest rate on both Spanish and Italian bonds fell sharply in yesterday’s trade. Crude oil prices are steady. Brent close to 115 and NYMEX above 96. Gold (1640) and silver (29,25) are bullish, and some experts claim that we are turing into a bullish commodity and precious metals market.
The Euro broke through the short term technical resistance level in its recent two week corridor where the common currency has seen movements between 1.2042 and 1.2444 on the upside. The rally we recently have seen in stocks is, however, has been built not on fundamentals, but on expectations that ECB shall convince resistant Germans to buy bonds to cap the yield of troubled euro zone sovereign states.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel voiced last week principle support for ECB’s crisis-fighting strategy. This boosted the short term both the Euro and global market sentiment. 1.2488 is the highest level seen on the Euro since early July. Euro zone top level meetings at the end of this week will give a more clear indication as to the future direction of the common currency. ECB bond buying and whether European leaders are willing to give necessary promises to keep Greece in the Euro, are on the top of the agenda.
Copyright: United World Capital
DAILY MARKET REVIEWS
by Arne Treholt Vice-President of Business Development and Investments
Asian stocks slipped back after Japan’s export fell an annual 8,1 percent in July. Collapsing shipments to Europe and a steep fall in sales to China caused the deepest drop in export in six months. The Japanese yen strengthened against the dollar trading at 79,28. The South Asian Pacifix index, MSCI fell 0,7 percent. The US-markets rallied during the first part of the session, but fell back from record highs. Standard and Poor’s 500 index rose to a four year high before slipping back into red.
The Euro/USD jumped back to a high on 1.2488 on expectations that the European Central Bank, ECB, will act to rein in surging borrowing costs. The interest rate on both Spanish and Italian bonds fell sharply in yesterday’s trade. Crude oil prices are steady. Brent close to 115 and NYMEX above 96. Gold (1640) and silver (29,25) are bullish, and some experts claim that we are turing into a bullish commodity and precious metals market.
The Euro broke through the short term technical resistance level in its recent two week corridor where the common currency has seen movements between 1.2042 and 1.2444 on the upside. The rally we recently have seen in stocks is, however, has been built not on fundamentals, but on expectations that ECB shall convince resistant Germans to buy bonds to cap the yield of troubled euro zone sovereign states.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel voiced last week principle support for ECB’s crisis-fighting strategy. This boosted the short term both the Euro and global market sentiment. 1.2488 is the highest level seen on the Euro since early July. Euro zone top level meetings at the end of this week will give a more clear indication as to the future direction of the common currency. ECB bond buying and whether European leaders are willing to give necessary promises to keep Greece in the Euro, are on the top of the agenda.
Copyright: United World Capital