Showing posts with label ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin


ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

US Market Reports
Stocks Turning In Lackluster Performance In Early Trading
7/31/2012 10:05 AM ET
Stocks are turning in another lackluster performance in early trading on Tuesday, as traders seem reluctant to make any significant moves. The major averages have turned mixed after ending the previous session modestly lower.
The major averages currently remain on opposite sides of the unchanged line, with the Nasdaq posting a modest gain. While the Nasdaq is up 1.91 points or 0.1 percent at 2,947.75, the Dow is down 25.20 points or 0.2 percent at 13,047.81 and the S&P 500 is down 1.86 points or 0.1 percent at 1,383.44.
The choppy trading on Wall Street comes as many traders are staying on the sidelines as the Federal Reserve begins a two-day monetary policy meeting.
The Fed is due to announce its latest monetary policy decision on Wednesday, while the European Central Bank is due to hold its monetary policy meeting on Thursday.
Peter Boockvar, managing director at Miller Tabak, said, "For the next two days we'll sit and wait for what the Fed will tell us they'll do next as patience and sitting still are not virtues of theirs."
"But, Mario Draghi and the ECB last week stole the thunder and took the microphone away from the Fed, making Thursday's ECB meeting much more relevant to markets," he added. Traders have largely shrugged off a batch of U.S. economic data, including a recent report showing that Chicago-area business activity unexpectedly expanded at a faster rate in July.
While most of the major sectors are showing only modest moves, electronic storage stocks have come under pressure. The NYSE Arca Disk Drive Index is down by 2.3 percent, with Seagate Technology leading the way lower after reporting disappointing quarterly results.
Brokerage and housing stocks are also seeing early weakness, while strength has emerged among semiconductor and steel stocks.
In overseas trading, stock markets across the Asia-Pacific region moved mostly higher during trading on Tuesday. Japan's Nikkei 225 Index advanced by 0.7 percent, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index surged up by 1.1 percent.
Meanwhile, the major European markets are turning in a mixed performance on the day. While the German DAX Index is up by 0.1 percent, the U.K.'s FTSE 100 Index and the French CAC 40 Index are down by 0.3 percent and 0.4 percent, respectively.
In the bond market, treasuries have moved moderately higher, continuing to recovery from the sell-off seen last Friday. Subsequently, the yield on the benchmark ten-year note, which moves opposite of its price, is down by 2.6 basis points at 1.478 percent.

Canadian Market Report
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TSX Poised For Higher Open Amid Soft GDP Data - Canadian Commentary
7/31/2012 9:01 AM ET
Canadian stocks are poised for a higher open Tuesday on firm commodities and on a mixed batch of corporate earnings reports. However, a soft economic growth data out of Canada may weigh on sentiment even as traders were cautiously optimistic on further stimulus after French and German leaders, and the ECB chief pledging to protect the euro zone.
U.S. stock futures were pointing to a marginally higher open.
On Monday, the S&P/TSX Composite Index snapped its three-session winning streak to edged down 8.48 points or 0.07 percent to 11,757.88.
The price of Crude oil was ticking higher Tuesday morning as traders await cues from a 2-day FOMC meeting, starts today Crude for September edged up $0.30 to $90.08 a barrel.
The price of gold continued to hover above the $1,600-mark Tuesday morning as the U.S. dollar was mixed ahead of the FOMC meeting. gold for December delivery added $4.90 to $1,628.90 an ounce.
In corporate news from Canada, electricity transmission systems operator Brookfield Infrastructure (BIP_UN.TO) announced that ti along with its institutional partners would acquire the remaining 45 percent of the Autopista Vespucio Norte or AVN toll road that they do not currently own for approximately $590 million.
Distribution utility company Fortis Inc. posted improved second quarter net earnings at C$62 million or C$0.33 per share compared to C$57 million or C$0.32 per share for the second quarter of 2011. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of C$0.33 per share.
Power company TransAlta Corp. (TA.TO) slipped into the red in second quarter, reporting net loss of C$797 million or C$3.51 per share versus profit of C$12 million or C$0.05 per share a year ago. Comparable loss was C$0.10 per share versus comparable earnings C$0.29 per share. Analysts were expecting the company to report loss of C$0.07 per share.
Oil fields services provider Trican Well Service (TCW.TO) slipped into the red in second-quarter, reporting a loss of C$50.9 million or C$0.35 per share compared to a profit of C$30.1 million or C$0.21 per share in the prior-year quarter. Adjusted loss was C$48.6 million or C$0.33 per share compared to a profit of C$33.3 million or C$0.23 per share last year. Analysts were expecting the company to report a loss of C$0.37 per share for the quarter.
BP plc (BP_UN.TO) posted second-quarter 2012 loss of $1.385 billion or 7.29 cents per share versus a $5.72 billion profit or 30.27 cents per share last year.
Hardware dealer RONA inc. (RON.TO) announced that its Board of Directors has unanimously determined that an unsolicited, non-binding $14.50 per share acquisition proposal recently received from U.S.-based Lowe's Companies, Inc. , is not in the best interests of RONA and its stakeholders.

7/31/2012 9:01 AM ET
News service provider Thomson Reuters Corp. reported a much improved second-quarter net earnings of $922 million or $1.11 per share compared to last year's $563 million or $0.67 per share. Adjusted earnings from continuing operations were $449 million or $0.54 per share, compared with $429 million or $0.51 per share .
In economic news, Statistics Canada said real gross domestic product edged up 0.1 percent in May, just missing consensus estimates for a 0.2 percent growth and lower than 0.3 percent growth recorded in April. The output of service industries rose 0.1 percent in May on the strength of retail trade and the finance and insurance sector.
From the U.S., the Commerce Department said that personal income in the U.S. had risen by $61.8 billion in June, an increase of 0.5 percent. The increase was higher than the 0.4 percent predicted by most economists and comes atop revised figures that showed the May increase in personal income of 0.3 percent was higher than the 0.2 percent initially reported. However consumer spending, known formally as personal consumption expenditures fell marginally in June, dropping $1.3 billion.
Elsewhere, today's data from the Eurostat revealed that euro zone inflation remained stable in July as expected by economists. The annual rate came in at 2.4 percent, above the central bank's target of "below but close to 2 percent." The final data is due on August 16.
A separate report from the agency said the euro zone unemployment rate remained unchanged at a record high in June. The jobless rate for June was 11.2 percent, the same as seen in May. The rate matched economists' expectations.
Unemployment in Germany increased in July as widely expected, data from the Federal Labor Agency showed. The number of unemployed rose by 7,000 in July from a month earlier. This was in line with economists' forecast and followed a similar increase in the previous month.
Meanwhile, Germany's retail sales dropped unexpectedly in June from the prior month, data from the Federal Statistical Office revealed. Retail turnover was down 0.1 percent from May, in contrast to a 0.5 percent rise expected by economists. Nonetheless, the rate of decline was slower than the 0.3 percent drop seen in May.


European Market Report
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European Markets Fell Again Tuesday Due To Lingering Economic Concerns
7/24/2012 11:56 AM ET
European markets struggled to find direction on Tuesday, but ultimately finished the session with modest losses. The increase in the Chinese manufacturing result was welcomed by investors, however the decision by Moody's to lower its outlook on Germany raised concerns. Concerns over the situation in Spain persisted, as well as the possibility of a Greek exit from the Eurozone. Shares of banks, insurers and telecoms were weak Tuesday, but technology stocks performed well.
An indicator of Chinese manufacturing activity rose to its highest level in five months in July despite suggesting contraction, with the modest improvement hinged on a rebound in output, which rose to a nine-month high.
Flash estimates released by Markit Economics revealed that the purchasing managers' index came in at 49.5 in July, up from 48.2 in June, suggesting the slowest contraction in manufacturing activity in five months.
Moody's Investors Service has warned Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg that they may lose their coveted triple-A credit ratings due to intensified uncertainty regarding the outcome of the debt crisis.
The agency cut the outlook on the sovereigns' Aaa rating to 'negative' from 'stable' and said the revision is driven by its view that the level of uncertainty about the outlook for the euro area and the potential impact of plausible scenarios on member states are no longer consistent with 'stable' outlooks.
Moody's said the risk of a Greek exit from the euro area has increased relative to its expectations earlier this year. A Greek exit from the monetary union would pose a material threat to the euro, it warned.
Moody's said these sovereigns are impacted by the "rising uncertainty regarding the outcome of the euro area debt crisis and the increased susceptibility to event risk stemming from the likelihood of Greek exit, including the broader impact that such an event would have on euro area members, particularly Spain and Italy."
Spain paid a hefty premium to sell its short-term debt on Tuesday as investors remained worried that the country is on the brink of seeking a full-blown bailout. Italy also saw its benchmark yield climb.
The Spanish Treasury raised EUR 3.05 billion from the sale of its 3- and 6-month treasury bills, which was slightly more than the EUR 2 billion - EUR 3 billion target. The agency sold EUR 1.63 billion of the 3-month bill to yield 2.434 percent, which is higher than the 2.362 percent paid in the previous auction on June 26.
The euro Stoxx 50 index of eurozone bluechip stocks declined by 0.95 percent, while the Stoxx Europe 50 index, which includes some major U.K. companies, dipped by 0.38 percent.

7/24/2012 11:56 AM ET
The DAX of Germany fell by 0.45 percent and the CAC 40 of France decreased by 0.87 percent. The FTSE 100 of the U.K. dropped by 0.41 percent and the SMI of Switzerland lost 0.06 percent.
In Frankfurt, SAP AG increased by 3.86 percent. The company reported a higher profit in its second quarter, boosted by strong software revenue growth in all regions.
Kontron AG sank by 14.87 percent, after it posted second-quarter net income of 2.3 million euros, a decline from 7.7 million euros reported a year ago.
In Paris, Publicis Groupe rose by 0.56 percent, after Barclays upgraded its rating on the stock to "Overweight."
In London, BP plc fell by 0.35 percent. The company confirmed it would begin negotiations with Rosneft for the potential purchase of BP's shareholding in TNK-BP.
Man Group increased by 3.98 percent, after the company announced that it would make $100 million in annual savings over the next 18 months.
Aberdeen Asset Management gained 1.14 percent. Societe Generale upgraded its rating on the stock to "Buy" from "Hold."
Croda International added 7.22 percent, after its strong than expected second quarter report.
Consumer confidence in Eurozone deteriorated in July amid further escalation of the debt crisis, the latest figures from the European Commission showed Monday. The flash estimate of the consumer confidence indicator decreased sharply to -21.6 in July from -19.8 in June in euro area.
The Eurozone private sector economy contracted for the tenth time in the last eleven months, with the rate of decline unchanged on June, Markit Economics said Tuesday. The flash composite Purchasing Managers' Index remained unchanged at 46.4 and matched the consensus forecast. A reading below 50 suggests contraction in the sector.
While the manufacturing PMI fell to 44.1 from 45.1 in June, the services PMI rose to 47.6 from 47.1. Economists were forecasting the manufacturing index to rise to 45.2 and the services PMI to remain stable at 47.1.
French business confidence declined in July, the latest data from the statistical office Insee showed Tuesday. The headline synthetic index for the manufacturing sector fell to 90 in July from a revised reading of 91 in June. Economists expected the reading to remain at June's original score of 92.
Germany's private sector continued to shrink in July, marking the weakest performance since June 2009, Markit Economics said Tuesday. The flash composite output index fell for the sixth month running in July, to 47.3 from 48.1 in June. The index has posted reading below 50 in each month since May.
7/24/2012 11:56 AM ET
The flash manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index dropped unexpectedly to 43.3 from 45 a month ago. The reading was below the consensus 45.1. Likewise, the services PMI fell to 49.7 from 49.9 in June. The reading was forecast to rise to 50.
Germany's leading economic indicator decreased for the second consecutive month in May, hurt mainly by negative contributions from stock prices and new residential construction orders, data released by the Conference Board showed Tuesday. The leading economic index dropped 0.1 percent to 104.3 in May, after decreasing 0.5 percent in the previous month.

Asia Market Reports
Asian Markets Mostly Trade In Positive Territory
7/31/2012 12:05 AM ET
Asian stock markets are mostly trading in positive territory on Tuesday with investors picking up stocks, betting on hopes that the U.S. Federal Reserve and central banks in Europe will come out with further stimulus to boost their sagging economies. Some regional economic data too is contributing to the rise in stock prices.
After a somewhat shaky start, the Australian market rallied smartly as investors shrugged off economic concerns and picked up stocks, betting on fresh stimulus from global central banks.
Energy, mining, financial, consumer staples and information technology stocks are moving higher, while healthcare and consumer discretionary stocks are trading mixed.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index is up 32.8 points or 0.8 percent at 4,278.5. The broader All Ordinaries index is trading at 4,297.5, up 30.6 points or 0.7 percent from its previous close.
Duet Group shares are up nearly 5 percent. Lynas Corporation is trading 4.8 percent up. Bluescope Steel, Paladin Energy, Origin Energy and Qantas Airways are up 3 to 4 percent.
Incitec Pivot, Atlas Iron, Beach Energy, JB Hi-Fi, Westfield Group, Woodside Petroleum, Dexus Property Group, Rio Tinto (, RIO.L) and Monadelphous Group are also trading sharply higher.
Campbell Brothers is plunging by over 12 percent. Fairfax Media and Boart Longyear are trading lower by over 4 percent.
Panaust is down with a loss of 2.8 percent. Arrium, Whitehaven Coal and ResMed Inc () are also trading notably lower. In addition, Regis Resources, Iluka Resources, Challenger, Macquarie Group and Bank of Queensland are trading lower.

Caltex Australia said it plans to raise A$300 million through capital markets to help fund changes to its operations. The oil refiner will issue subordinated notes, priced at A$100 each, to retail and institutional investors to raise the funds. The company's shares are currently trading flat.
Metcash Ltd. said it has paid A$46.5 million to take complete ownership of hardware chain Mitre 10. The stock is currently trading lower by about 0.3 percent.
In economic news, the number of dwelling units approved in Australia dropped in June, but the rate of decline was weaker than expected by economists, according to data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
As many as 13,336 dwelling units were approved in June, which was 2.5 percent less than a month earlier on a seasonally adjusted basis. Economists expected a decline of 15 percent after a strong 27 percent gain in the previous month.
The seasonally adjusted estimate for private sector houses fell 1.1 percent in June following a rise of 7.3 percent in the previous month. Year-on-year, total dwelling permits increased 10.2 percent. Approvals for private houses declined 7.7 percent annually.


Commodities
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Dollar Recovering From Recent Losses Versus European Rivals
7/30/2012 1:20 PM ET
The dollar is bouncing back from some recent weakness against its major European rivals on Monday. The euro rallied late last week, after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi stated that the ECB is ready to do whatever it takes to preserve the euro. Investors are looking for some crucial action from the European Central Bank, which holds its rate-setting session later this week.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti have vowed to defend the euro amid escalating tensions in Eurozone, close on the heels of a similar agreement between Merkel and French President Francois Hollande.
During a telephone conversation on Sunday, Merkel and Monti agreed that both the countries "will do everything possible to protect the euro area," reports said.
The dollar has rebounded from Friday's 3-week low of $1.2389 versus the Euro, to around $1.2250 Monday.
Eurozone economic sentiment deteriorated more-than-expected in July due to lower confidence in all sectors and marked the fourth consecutive month of downturn. The economic sentiment index fell to 87.9 from 89.9 a month ago, survey data from the European Commission showed Monday. The reading was also below expectations for a score of 88.9.
German wholesale trade turnover rebounded in June after declining for the past three months, the latest figures from the Federal Statistical Office showed Monday. Wholesale sales increased 4 percent year-on-year in June following a 2.8 percent fall in May. In March and April, sales fell 1.1 percent and 0.9 percent respectively.

Spanish economic output sank further in the second quarter, deepening the recession in the euro area's fourth largest economy, which is already hit by a banking sector crisis and the government's tough austerity measures.
The gross domestic product fell 0.4 percent in the second quarter of 2012 after a 0.3 percent decline in the first quarter of 2012 and in the fourth quarter of 2011. The outcome was in line with the Bank of Spain's estimates released early last week.
The greenback has also bounced back from Friday's low of $1.5767 versus the pound sterling, to around $1.5675.
UK's high street sales increased for the third consecutive month in July, but the rate of growth slowed from the previous month, data from a survey by the Confederation of British Industry showed Monday.
The balance of the survey came in at 11 percent in July, with 44 percent of surveyed retailers reporting an increase in sales volumes and 33 percent reporting a decline. Economists were looking for a balance of 20 percent. The latest figure was also far below the 32 percent balance retailers had expected.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin


ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news

Tuesday, 24 July 2012

US Market Reports
Stocks Moving Mostly Lower In Late Morning Trading
After moving modestly lower in early trading on Tuesday, stocks have seen some further downside over the course of the morning. The major averages have slid more firmly into negative territory, adding to the steep losses posted in the previous session.
Concerns about the financial situation in Europe are once again contributing to the weakness on Wall Street, with traders reacting to news that credit ratings agency Moody's revised the outlooks on the Aaa sovereign ratings of Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg to negative from stable.
Networking stocks have shown a notable move to the downside on the day, dragging the NYSE Arca Networking Index down by 2 percent. Cisco is helping to lead the way lower after announcing plans to cut about 1,300 jobs or about 2 percent of its global workforce.
Significant weakness has also emerged among transportation stocks, as reflected by the 1.2 percent loss being posted by the Dow Jones Transportation Average. With the loss, the average has fallen to its lowest intraday level in a month.
Energy stocks are also under pressure despite a rebound by the price of Crude oil, while steel, defense, computer hardware, and healthcare stocks are also posting notable losses.
The major averages have moved roughly sideways in recent trading, stuck well below the unchanged line. The Dow is down 81.70 points or 0.6 percent at 12,639.76, the Nasdaq is down 12.23 points or 0.4 percent at 2,877.92 and the S&P 500 is down 8.69 points or 0.6 percent at 1,341.83.



Canadian Market Report
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TSX Edges Up As Commodities Recover - Canadian Commentary
Canadian stocks were hovering just above the unchanged line Tuesday morning supported by manufacturing data out of China and the recent batch of deal making.
However, gains were capped amid escalating concerns over the euro zone financial situation as investors fret over the possibility of a Spanish sovereign bailout. Adding to the worries, Moody's Investors Service downgraded its rating outlook on Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg to 'negative' from 'stable' due to intensified uncertainty regarding the outcome of the debt crisis.
The S&P/TSX Composite Index edged up 12.20 points or 0.11 percent to 11,557.74, after shedding 120 points or 1 percent in the past two sessions.
Coal miner CIC Energy Corp. (ELC.TO) surged nearly 15 percent after announcing that it would be acquired by India-based Jindal Steel & Power Ltd in exchange of C$2.00 per share, representing just over 25 percent premium to its latest closing price.
Nexen Inc. was holding on to its previous session's gains, adding 1 percent. Yesterday, the stock skyrocketed over 50 percent after Chinese oil major CNOOC Ltd. (CEO) said it would acquire Nexen Inc. for $27.50 per share in cash.
Rogers Communications Inc. (RCI_A.TO, RCI_B.TO) gained over 5 percent after reporting second quarter earnings above street estimates. The communications and media company reported a marginally lower second-quarter net income of C$400 million or C$0.75 per share compared to C$410 million or C$0.74 per share in the same quarter last year. However excluding items, adjusted net income from continuing operations grew to C$478 million or C$0.91 per share from C$469 million or C$0.85 per share in the year-ago quarter. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of C$0.86 per share for the quarter.
The price of gold was flat as the euro was struggling after data out of the euro zone revealed contraction in private sector activity. gold for August edged up $0.20 to $1,577.60 an ounce.
Among gold stocks, international gold miner Eldorado gold Corp. rose over 4 percent after announcing that Greece lawmakers revoked the "Provisional Order" issued on June 29, 2012, which temporarily suspended the surface clearing activities of Hellas gold S.A., a 95 percent owned unit of Eldorado, in Halkidiki, Greece.
Agnico-Eagle Mines moved up 2 percent, while Royal gold was adding nearly 1 percent.
Healthcare services provider Centric Health Corp. (CHH.TO) moved up 1.50 percent after announcing d that it has appointed David Cutler as its President and Chief Executive Officer. Cutler will assume his responsibilities during September 2012.
The price of Crude oil was ticking higher Tuesday morning after data out of China that revealed minor recovery in the nation's manufacturing sector. Preliminary results of HSBC's monthly survey of manufacturers revealed the contraction in Chinese manufacturing eased in July, with the .Purchasing Managers' Index rising to 49.5 from 48.2. Crude for September was up $0.45 to $88.59 a barrel.
In the oil patch, Pacific Rubiales Energy and Encana Corp. were down around 2 percent each.
In economic news, Statistics Canada said retail sales rose 0.3 percent to $38.9 billion in May, missing economists estimates for a 0.5 percent growth. Gains were reported in 6 of 11 sub-sectors, representing 53 percent of retail trade. Overall, retail sales have been relatively flat since November 2011. In volume terms, retail sales rose 0.7 percent.
Elsewhere, the euro zone private sector economy contracted for the tenth time in the last eleven months, with the rate of decline unchanged on June, Markit Economics said. The flash composite Purchasing Managers' Index remained unchanged at 46.4 and matched the consensus forecast. A reading below 50 suggests contraction in the sector.
Further, Germany's private sector continued to shrink in July, marking the weakest performance since June 2009, Markit Economics said. The flash composite output index fell for the sixth month running in July, to 47.3 from 48.1 in June. The index has posted reading below 50 in each month since May.


European Market Report
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European Markets Finished Mixed With Focus On Bernanke
The European markets struggled to find a direction on Tuesday. The markets ended the session mixed, as attention focused on the testimony of U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke began his testimony before the Senate.
The Federal Reserve is prepared to take further action to jump start the sluggish U.S. recovery, the nation's top central banker told lawmakers Tuesday morning. However, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke offered no hints that the central bank is specifically planning another round of quantitative easing.
"Reflecting its concerns about the slow pace of progress in reducing unemployment and the downside risks to the economic outlook, the FOMC made clear at its June meeting that it is prepared to take further actions as appropriate to promote a stronger economic recovery and sustained improvement in labor market conditions in a context of price stability," Bernanke said in delivering his twice-a-year testimony to the Senate Banking Committee.
The International Monetary Fund Monday said it approved a fresh loan to Portugal after the country passed a monetary review in connection with its bailout program. The IMF approved the disbursement of EUR1.48 billion after completing its fourth review of the Portuguese economy under an extended fund facility (EFF) arrangement with the government. With the release of fresh funds the total disbursements under the EFF arrangement will reach around EUR21.13 billion.
Just three days after it downgraded the country's sovereign credit rating by two notches, rating agency Moody's Investors Service on Monday lowered the long-term debt and deposit ratings of ten Italian banks and the issuer ratings for three Italian financial institutions by one to two notches. All of the banks and financial institutions affected by the ratings cut have a 'negative' outlook, which may increase the likelihood of future downgrades.
Spanish borrowing costs declined on Tuesday in its first debt auction since the government announced the latest round of austerity measures last week in a bid to attain deficit targets amid a severe recession.
The Spanish Treasury sold a total EUR 3.56 billion of 12- and 18-month bills, slightly exceeding the target of EUR 2.5 billion - EUR 3.5 billion set for the sale. The country placed EUR 2.6 billion worth of 12-month T-bills to yield 3.918 percent, which was much less than the 5.074 percent paid at the previous auction on June 19.
The euro Stoxx 50 index of eurozone bluechip stocks declined by 0.21 percent, while the Stoxx Europe 50 index, which includes some major U.K. companies, lost 0.34 percent.
The DAX of Germany climbed by 0.18 percent and the SMI of Switzerland increased by 0.11 percent. The CAC 40 of France decreased by 0.09 percent and the FTSE 100 of the U.K. dropped by 0.72 percent,
In Paris, Alcatel-Lucent sank by 20.19 percent after the telecom equipment maker forecast an operating loss excluding certain items in its second quarter.
Technip climbed by 1.57 percent, after it was awarded a contract by Marathon Oil Norge.
In London, Royal Dutch Shell Plc finished down by 0.50 percent. The company said it would not revise its 220 pence per share offer to acquire Cove Energy and not take part in the auction process to complete the potential acquisition.
British lender HSBC Holdings fell by 1.88 percent after the British lender and top U.S. bank regulator, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, drew stinging criticism in a Senate report on money-laundering.
Shares of CSR Plc surged by 33.72 percent. Samsung Electronics agreed to acquire its handset connectivity and location development operations and technology for $310 million in cash.
Rio Tinto declined by 2.68 percent after the mining giant reported second quarter iron ore production that was almost flat with last year.
G4S dropped by 5.66 percent, after it was downgraded to "Neutral" from "Buy" by Bank of America.
Wolseley decreased by 2.15 percent. The company announced that it will explore strategic options for its businesses in France.
National Grid fell by 3.08 percent, after Societe Generale lowered its price target on the stock.
German investor sentiment declined for the third month in a row to its lowest level in six months, adding to signs that the euro area debt crisis is hurting the outlook for the region's biggest economy. The ZEW Indicator of Economic Sentiment dropped to minus 19.6 points from minus 16.9 in June. That was slightly better than economists' forecast for a score of minus 20.
U.K.'s annual consumer price inflation eased for a third straight month in June to the lowest level since November 2009, helped by falling fuel prices and heavy discounting to boost sales, the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics showed Tuesday. Consumer price inflation fell to 2.4 percent in June from 2.8 percent in May. Economists expected the rate to remain unchanged at the May level.
With a steep drop in energy prices offset by higher prices for food, medical care, and apparel, the Labor Department released a report on Tuesday showing that overall U.S. consumer prices were unchanged in the month of June. The Labor Department said its consumer price index came in flat in June following a 0.3 percent drop in May. The flat reading on consumer prices came in line with economist estimates.
Industrial production in the U.S. increased by slightly more than anticipated in the month of June, according to a report released by the Federal Reserve on Tuesday, with the increase partly due to a rebound by output in the manufacturing sector.
The Fed said industrial production rose by 0.4 percent in June following a revised 0.2 percent decrease in May. Economists had expected production to increase by 0.3 percent compared to the 0.1 percent drop originally reported for the previous month.
Homebuilder confidence has seen a substantial improvement in the month of July, according to a report released by the National Association of Home Builders on Tuesday, with the index of homebuilder confidence rising to a new five-year high.
The report showed that the NAHB /Wells Fargo Housing Market Index jumped to 35 in July from 29 in June, marking the biggest monthly increase in nearly a decade. Economists had expected the index to edge up to a reading of 30.

Asia Market Reports
Asian Stocks End Mixed After Chinese Data
Asian stocks pared early losses to end on a mixed note on Tuesday, helped by improved Chinese manufacturing data. With earlier easing measures starting to work, China's manufacturing contracted at a slower pace in July, flash estimates released by Markit Economics revealed. The PMI reading came in at 49.5 in July, up from 48.2 in the previous month, suggesting the slowest contraction in manufacturing activity in five months.
Besides Chinese data, investors continued to monitor news from Europe for directional cues. Adding to growing worries about Spain and Greece, Moody's Investors Service has lowered its rating outlooks on Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg to 'negative' from 'stable' entailing a higher risk of an actual downgrade within the next two years.
Commodities were mixed, while the euro extended its losses against the dollar and yen ahead of crisis talks between Spanish and German finance ministers in Berlin later in the day
Tokyo stocks fell slightly due to rising risk aversion after Moody's lowered its outlook on Germany. The benchmark Nikkei average eased 0.2 percent to end at a six-week low, while the broader Topix index shed 0.4 percent. Concerns over Spain's rising borrowing costs weighed on exporters, dragging Canon down 1.5 percent and Honda Motor down a percent. China-related Komatsu rose a percent, while Hitatchi Construction Machinery added 1.2 percent.
Sharp fell 1.7 percent on a Nikkei report that it may post a group net loss of roughly Y100 billion for the April-June quarter. Toshiba tumbled 5.4 percent after unveiling plans to cut production of flash memory chips by 30 percent.
China's Shanghai Composite index rose 0.24 percent, buoyed by manufacturing data. Property developers rallied after recent losses, while losses in the financial sector capped further upside. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index ended down 0.8 percent to 18,903, its lowest closing level since June 25.
Australian shares fluctuated between gains and losses before ending modestly higher, as signs of improvement in China's manufacturing output offset concerns about the economic outlook for Spain and Greece. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.01 percent, while the broader All Ordinaries index edged up 0.05 percent.
Retailers were in focus, with shares of Billabong climbing nearly 20 percent after U.S. private equity firm TPG launched a fresh 695.6 million Australian dollars takeover bid for the company. Woolworths rose 0.9 percent and Wesfarmer added 0.4 percent, but David Jones fell 2.6 percent and Harvey Norman declined 1.5 percent.
Resources stocks ended on a firm note, with BHP Billiton gaining 1.2 percent after the miner said it is conducting a review of contractors and staff across its mining mega-projects. Rival Rio Tinto rose half a percent, while Fortescue ended subdued near a two-year low.
In the energy sector, Oil Search gained 0.3 percent after it maintained its full-year production guidance. Woodside Petroleum rose 1.9 percent and Santos ended up 0.8 percent. Lender ANZ gave up early gains to end down 0.3 percent and NAB edged down 0.1 percent, while Commonwealth rose marginally and Westpac added 0.3 percent.
South Korea's Kospi average finished 0.3 percent higher, led by gains in large-cap shares on positive earnings outlooks. Among the prominent gainers, mobile service provider SK Telecom soared 6 percent, while chip maker SK Hynix rallied 2.2 percent.
New Zealand shares recouped early losses to end modestly lower on concerns over Greece and Spain. The benchmark NZX-50 index ended up about 5 points or 0.1 percent at 3,461. Cloud-based accounting firm Xero tumbled 5.5 percent from a record high ahead of Thursday's annual shareholder meeting.
Fishing firm Sanford lost 2 percent on reports the U.S. could list orange roughy an endangered species. Food ingredients manufacturer Goodman Fielder rose 3.3 percent after tumbling 6.1 percent yesterday when it warned of more write-offs in the 2012 financial year.
Elsewhere, India's benchmark Sensex was last trading up 0.4 percent and Singapore's Straits Times index was gaining half a percent, while Indonesia's Jakarta Composite index slid 0.4 percent, Malaysia's KLSE Composite eased 0.2 percent and the Taiwan's Weighted average shed 0.3 percent.
On Wall Street, stocks ended notably lower overnight, as signs that Spain could require a full bailout and the rising probability of a Greek exit from the euro zone spooked investors. The Dow slid 0.8 percent, the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 1.2 percent and the S&P 500 dropped 0.9 percent.

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Dollar Strengthens As European Economic Concerns Persist
The dollar has gained ground against its major competitors on Monday. Spain announced a ban on short sales of stocks for three months, while Italy banned short sales of stocks in the financial sector for one week. The situation in Greece has once again raised concerns that the country may exit the Eurozone. The Spanish economy sunk deeper into recession in the second quarter, the Bank of Spain said, while bailout concerns pushed the country's borrowing costs to euro-era highs. In its quarterly estimates released on Monday, the Bank of Spain said the economy would have contracted 0.4 percent sequentially in the second quarter. This was sharper than the 0.3 percent contraction reported in the first quarter of 2012 as well as in the final three months of 2011.
Spain's Valencia and Murcia Regions have asked for financial aid, leading to speculation that a sovereign bailout may be necessary. The yield on 10-year Spanish government bonds climbed to 7.46 percent, touching a new euro-era record.
The International Monetary Fund has signaled that it may not participate in further economic assistance for Greece, heightening the risk that the country may run out of cash by September, Germany's Der Spiegel reported Sunday citing unidentified EU officials.
The newspaper said that it is already clear to the troika, comprising the European Union, IMF and the European Central Bank, that the country will not reach the 120 percent deficit target. The troika will return to Athens for inspection on Tuesday.
In an interview to broadcaster ARD on Sunday, German Vice Chancellor Philipp Roesler said if Greece does not meet the obligations, then there can be no more payments. A Greek exit from the Eurozone has long ago lost its horror, he added.
The euro is not in danger and "is irrevocable," European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said in an interview to French newspaper Le Monde over the weekend.
Some analysts are imagining scenarios in which there is an explosion of the euro area. "That underestimates the political capital that our leaders have invested in this union, as well as the support of European citizens," he said.
The greenback climbed to a new 2-year high of $1.2066 versus the euro on Monday, but has since eased back to around $1.2125.
The British manufacturing sector is likely to contract this year as the economic turbulence in the Eurozone continues affect trade and exports, a report published by manufacturers' organization Engineering Employers' Federation showed Monday. EEF expects manufacturing output to decline 0.3 percent in 2012, faster than the 0.1 percent fall forecast earlier. It will mark the first contraction in three years.

Monday, July 16, 2012

ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin


ADVFN III World Daily Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news



US Market Reports
Stocks Staging Recovery Attempt After Seeing Early Weakness
After moving notably lower in early trading, stocks have regained some ground over the course of morning trading on Monday. The major averages have climbed well off their lows for the session but currently remain in negative territory.
The early weakness on Wall Street was partly due to release the release of a report from the Commerce Department showing an unexpected drop in retail sales in the month of June. Sales fell for the third consecutive month, adding to recent concerns about the economic outlook.
Nonetheless, a relatively upbeat report on New York manufacturing activity helped to limit the downside for the markets along with a positive reaction to Citigroup's (C) quarterly results.
While many of the major sectors have bounced off their worst levels since then, significant weakness remains visible among networking stocks. The NYSE Arca Networking Index is down by 1.3 percent after hitting a three-year intraday low.
Trucking stocks also remain under pressure, with the Dow Jones Trucking Index down by 1.3 percent. Steel, defense, and chemical stocks also continue to see weakness, while strength has emerged among airline and biotech stocks.
The major averages have shown a notable move to the upside in the past few minutes, climbing back near the unchanged line. The Dow is down 28.16 points at 12,748.93, the Nasdaq is down 0.37 points at 2,908.10 and the S&P 500 is down 0.20 points at 1,356.58.

Canadian Market Report
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TSX Flat Amid Cautious Trade - Canadian Commentary
Canadian stocks were little changed Monday morning with traders awaiting cues from the Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's testimony to Congress, this week. Meanwhile, the IMF today slashed its 2013 growth forecast for the global economy. In an update to its twice-yearly World Economic Outlook, the lender cut the world growth forecast for next year to 3.9 percent from 4.1 percent predicted in April. The outlook for this year was left unchanged at 3.5 percent.
The S&P/TSX Composite Index slipped 9.12 points or 0.08 percent to 11,505.41.
The Diversified Materials Index was the major loser, shedding close to 2 percent. Ivanhoe Mines lost nearly 5 percent First Quantum Minerals and Teck Resources slipped around 1 percent each.
The price of Crude oil edged up Monday morning as traders await cues from the Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's testimony to Congress, this week. Crude for August was up $0.15 to $87.25 a barrel.
In the oil patch, Petrominerales and Celtic Exploration were down around 3 percent each.
Meanwhile, MEG Energy soared 6 percent after announcing expansion plans. Niko Resources moved up 4 percent.
The price of gold was ticking lower Monday morning amid a steady U.S. dollar. gold for August eased $1.50 to $1,590.50 an ounce.
Among gold plays, Royal gold and Agnico-Eagle Mines lost about 2 percent each. Centerra gold surrendered nearly 4 percent.
BlackBerry maker Research In Motion lost just over 2 percent after it said it would pay $147.2 million in a litigation against Mformation Technologies Inc.
The Canadian government on Sunday approved Swiss commodities trader Glencore International plc's C$6.1 billion acquisition of the nation's biggest grain handler Viterra Inc. (VT.TO). Shares of Viterra eased 0.25 percent.
Meanwhile, real estate company Madison Pacific Properties Inc. (MPC.TO) soared 18 percent.
In economic news, Statistics Canada said non-residents acquired a record $26.1 billion of Canadian securities in May, mainly in the form of government debt securities. Canadian investors made a modest $1.3 billion purchase of foreign securities in the month, following a divestment in April.
From south of the border, U.S. retail sales posted an unexpected and severe drop for June, according to the Commerce Department. Advance estimates for U.S. retail sales for June came in at a seasonally adjusted level of $401.5 billion, a 0.5 percent drop from May levels. Most economists had expected retail sales, which fell 0.2 percent in May, to rebound in June rather than continuing to contract, with the consensus forecast predicting 0.2 percent growth.
Elsewhere, euro zone inflation was 2.4 percent in June, unchanged from the previous month, the latest report from Eurostat showed. The figure matched the preliminary estimate. The rate was the lowest since February 2011. On a monthly basis, the harmonized index of consumer prices fell 0.1 percent.
A separate report from the Eurostat revealed that trade surplus in the region rose more than expected by economists in May. The trade balance was in a surplus of EUR 6.9 billion in May, higher than EUR 3.7 billion in April. Economists expected the surplus to rise to EUR 4 billion.

European Market Report
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European Markets Mostly Lower
The European markets are mostly lower in afternoon trading Monday, after comments made by China's Premier Wen Jiabao over the weekend evoked global reaction. Carmakers were apprehensive on China growth fears. The major Asian markets ended mostly higher as investors averred that Jiabao's remarks might be followed by stimulus measures.
Jiabao warned that the country's economic recovery is yet to gain momentum and the economic strains may continue for some more time, the official Xinhua news agency reported Sunday. Economic recovery is not yet stable and economic hardships may continue for a period of time, he said during an inspection tour in southwest Sichuan province over the weekend.
The euro Stoxx 50 index of eurozone bluechip stocks is falling 0.32 percent, while the Stoxx Europe 50 index, which includes some major U.K. companies, is gaining 0.06 percent.
The German DAX is down 0.04 percent, the UK's FTSE 100 is losing 0.07 percent the French CAC 40 is falling 0.26 percent. However, Switzerland's SMI is gaining 0.20 percent.
In Frankfurt, Adidas is declining 1.5 percent. Commerzbank is losing 1 percent and Deutsche Bank is down 0.6 percent.
BMW, Volkswagen and Daimler are in negative territory.
SolarWorld is declining 7.8 percent. The stock was cut to "Sell" from "Hold" at Commerzbank.
Infineon Technologies is advancing 3.1 percent and Lufthansa is rising 1.3 percent.
Metro is gaining 2 percent after UBS raised the stock to "Neutral" from "Sell."
Basf is marginally higher. Nomura raised the stock to "Buy" from "Neutral."
In Paris, BNP Paribas and Credit Agricole are moderately lower while Societe Generale is flat.
Carrefour is up 0.3 percent. Berenberg raised the stock to "Buy" from "Sell."
In London, Smiths Group announced the disposal of its minority stake in Cross Match Technologies Inc. for up to $77 million. The stock is up around 2 percent.
G4S is declining 9 percent after the security firm regretted its inability to deliver the promised security staff for the London Olympics. The company would record up to 50 million pounds charge in the current year, related to this contract.
Software firm Sage Group said its trading performance since April 1 remains broadly in-line with its expectations, despite a "toughening" economic environment. The firm remains cautious on the outlook for Europe. The stock is losing over 3 percent.
Rio Tinto and Anglo American are falling over 1 percent in response to growth fears in China.
Barclays is losing 2.9 percent amid more scrutiny into the Libor manipulation scandal.
National Grid is declining 2.3 percent. Noting that Ofgem has published high level details of its initial proposals, the firm said there are several vital areas where Ofgem's proposals differ substantially from National Grid's comprehensive business plan submissions for transmission and gas distribution.
In Stockholm, apparel retailer Hennes & Mauritz is falling over 1 percent after it said total sales in June, including value added tax, increased 13 percent in local currencies, with a 3 percent rise in comparable units sales.
Shares of Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB or SEB are surging over 7 percent after the bank reported higher profit before credit losses in its second quarter.
PostNL is losing 4.7 percent in Amsterdam while Delta Lloyd is climbing 1.7 percent.
Clariant is gaining 1.7 percent in Zurich. Nomura upgraded the stock.
In economic news, inflation in Eurozone was 2.4 percent in June, unchanged from the previous month, the latest report from Eurostat showed. The figure matched the preliminary estimate.
Meanwhile, Eurozone's trade surplus rose more than expected by economists in May. The trade balance was in a surplus of 6.9 billion euros in May, higher than 3.7 billion euros in April. Economists expected the surplus to rise to 4 billion euros.
Across Asia/Pacific, major markets ended mostly higher. Australia's All Ordinaries gained 0.60 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 0.15 percent. However, China's Shanghai Composite index bucked the uptrend and retreated 1.7 percent after Jiabao's comments.
In the U.S., futures point to a lower open on Wall Street. In the previous session, the major averages saw continued strength going into the close, ending the day firmly in positive territory. The Dow jumped 1.6 percent, the Nasdaq surged up 1.5 percent and the S&P 500 soared 1.7 percent.
In the commodity space, Crude for August delivery is falling $0.36 to $86.74 per barrel and August gold is losing $8.1 to $1583.9 a troy ounce.

Asia Market Reports
Asian Stocks Mixed Amid China Concerns
Asian stocks turned in a mixed performance on Monday, as positive sentiment following strong earnings from JPMorgan Chase & Co and Wells Fargo & Co tempered concerns about an impending Chinese economic slowdown. With several U.S. companies reporting results this week and Spain's bond auctions due on Tuesday and Thursday, investors await fresh directional cues from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's congressional testimony on July 17 and 18.
A slew of key U.S. corporate second-quarter earnings announcements are due this week, with Citigroup reporting results before the open of Wall Street later today, while Coca-Cola, Goldman Sachs Group, Intel, Johnson & Johnson and Yahoo Inc. are scheduled to announce their quarterly results tomorrow.
Commodities such as copper and Crude edged lower and the euro eased against the dollar after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the question of liability for future aid to troubled banks in Europe has not yet been decided.
China's Shanghai Composite index tumbled 1.7 percent to end at a more than three-year low on growth concerns after Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao warned that the country's economic rebound was not yet stable and economic hardship may persist for a while.
However, spurring speculation of more stimulus measures, Wen said that the government would "fine tune" policy in the second half to support growth, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose a modest 0.2 percent, with mainland oil stocks pacing the gainers.
Australian shares rose notably despite caution ahead of Bernanke's semi-annual testimony before the U.S. lawmakers on the state of the economy on Tuesday and Wednesday. Paring some early gains, both the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 and the broader All Ordinaries index ended the session up about 0.6 percent each.
Miners BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto ended up 1 percent and 0.8 percent, respectively, while smaller rival Fortescue climbed 2.4 percent and gold miner Newcrest added 1.7 percent. Among the big banks, ANZ, Commonwealth and Westpac rose about half a percent each, but NAB eased 0.4 percent.
The Australian dollar held on to its gains made on Friday as investors looked ahead to the release of the minutes of the Reserve Bank of Australia's June 3 board meeting due out tomorrow for clues on whether the central bank will cut its cash rate next month.
Seoul shares rose modestly, with the benchmark Kospi average rising 0.3 percent, as investors looked for direction from U.S. and domestic corporate earnings. Battered petrochemical shares such as LG Chem and SK Chemicals rose 2-4 percent, while heavyweights Samsung Electronics and Hyundai Motor rose about a percent each, extending Friday's gains.
Shipbuilder Hyundai Heavy Industries tumbled 2.9 percent, extending its losing streak for a seventh consecutive session on concerns that its second-quarter operating profit may miss estimates.
New Zealand shares extended declines from a two-month high, as investors fretted about a weak earnings season. Telecom, the biggest company on the exchange, tumbled 3.1 percent, Chorus, Telecom's demerged infrastructure arm, retreated 3.7 percent and Fletcher Building, the nation's largest construction company, lost 1.7 percent.
Among the prominent gainers, insurer Tower and carpet maker Cavalier rose about 3 percent each. gold miner OceanaGold added 1.3 percent after providing a progress report on its Didipio gold and copper project in the Philippines. The benchmark NZX-50 index slid 0.8 percent.
Elsewhere, the Japanese market was closed for a public holiday. India's benchmark Sensex was last trading down 0.2 percent in volatile trading after government data showed the nation's headline inflation slowed to its lowest level in five months in June. However, at 7.25 percent, the inflation is still way above the Reserve Bank of India's 6 percent target.
Indonesia's Jakarta Composite index was up 0.7 percent and Malaysia's KLSE Composite rose 0.6 percent, while Singapore's Straits Times was down marginally and the Taiwan Weighted average eased 0.2 percent.
On Wall Street, stocks rose sharply on Friday, with economic data from China as well as JPMorgan's strong quarterly results underpinning sentiment. Traders largely shrugged off a report from Thomson Reuters and the University of Michigan that showed an unexpected decline in consumer sentiment to the lowest level this year in July. The Dow rallied 1.6 percent, the tech-heavy Nasdaq gained 1.5 percent and the S&P 500 added 1.7 percent.


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Eurozone Trade Surplus Surges On Higher Shipments, Weak Imports
Eurozone trade surplus surged notably in May on rising exports and weak imports to exceed expectations, a report from Eurostat showed Monday.
Due to an increase in exports and the continuing fall in imports, the trade surplus grew to EUR 6.9 billion from EUR 3.7 billion in April. Economists had expected the surplus to rise to EUR 4 billion.
A year ago, the balance of trade in goods was in a deficit of EUR 1.2 billion. In seasonally adjusted terms, the trade surplus was EUR 6.3 billion, bigger than April's EUR 4.5 billion surplus and consensus forecast of EUR 5 billion.
IHS Global Insight's economist Howard Archer said the trade surplus masks generally worrying trends. The improved surplus primarily occurred due to a fall in imports and the slight growth in exports does little to dilute concern that weakened global growth is hitting foreign demand for Eurozone goods.
On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, Eurozone exports rose 0.3 percent, reversing April's 1.4 percent drop. Meanwhile, the downward trend in imports continues in May, which was down 0.9 percent.
Non-seasonally adjusted data showed that annual export growth remained steady at 6 percent, while imports remained flat in May.
The extra-EU27 trade in goods balance was a EUR 3.8 billion deficit, compared with EUR 14.5 billion shortfall in May.
In a separate communique, the statistical office confirmed 2.4 percent inflation in June, which was the lowest since February 2011.