REPEAT-New Zealand/Australia Morning Call-Global markets

Tue, 11 Feb - 4:27am
 (Repeats without change to additional subscribers) 
-----------------------(07:19 / 1819 GMT)----------------------- 
 Stock Markets                                                   
S&P/ASX 200    5,222.15  +55.62  NZSX 50        4,833.06   -7.73 
DJIA          15,769.35  -24.73  Nikkei        14,718.34 +255.93 
NASDAQ         4,136.71  +10.85  FTSE           6,591.55  +19.87 
S&P 500        1,796.18   -0.84  Hang Seng     21,579.26  -57.59 
SPI 200 Fut    5,170.00   +1.00  TRJCRB Index     289.27   -0.50 
 
 Bonds                                                           
AU 10 YR Bond     4.151  -0.002  US 10 YR Bond     2.680  +0.005 
NZ 10 YR Bond     4.575  +0.000  US 30 YR Bond     3.672  +0.007 
 
 Currencies (Prev at 7pm NZST)                                   
AUD US$          0.8945  0.8939  NZD US$          0.8265  0.8277 
EUR US$          1.3643  1.3626  Yen US$          102.16  102.36 
 
 Commodities                                                     
Gold (Lon)      1277.00          Silver (Lon)     20.200         
Gold (NY)       1266.58          Light Crude      100.11         
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
 Overnight market action with latest New York figures. 
 
    EQUITIES 
    NEW YORK - U.S. stocks were little changed on Monday, on the 
heels of the S&P 500's best two-day performance in four months 
and ahead of new Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen's first 
testimony before lawmakers on Tuesday. 
    The Dow Jones industrial average    fell 19.92 points or 
0.13 percent, to 15,774.16, the S&P 500    lost 0.71 points 
or 0.04 percent, to 1,796.31 and the Nasdaq Composite    
added 7.165 points or 0.17 percent, to 4,133.026. 
    For a full report, double click on  .N  
    - - - -  
    LONDON - Fresh political pressure on British utilities hit 
the sector's stocks on Monday, limiting broader gains in the 
UK's top equity index although it rose for the fourth straight 
session. 
    The blue-chip FTSE 100    index closed up by 0.3 
percent, or 19.87 points, at 6,591.55 points. 
    For a full report, double click on  .L  
    - - - -  
    TOKYO - Japan's Nikkei share average rose to a one-week high 
on Monday as a softer yen underpinned sentiment, with 
index-heavyweight stocks as SoftBank Corp 9984.T leading the 
gains. 
    The Nikkei    ended 1.8 percent higher at 14,718.34 
points, its highest close since Jan. 31 and moving away from a 
four-month low of 13,995.86 hit last week. 
    The Topix    rose 1.3 percent to 1,204.28, with 31 of 
its 33 subsectors in positive territory. A total of 2.19 billion 
shares changed hands, the lowest since Jan. 20. 
    For a full report, double click on  .T  
    - - - -  
    FOREIGN EXCHANGE  
    NEW YORK - The dollar held steady against major currencies 
on Monday as traders waited to hear the economic and policy 
views of Janet Yellen, the new head of the Federal Reserve, 
following a disappointing January report on the U.S. labor 
market. 
    The dollar index    last traded down 0.02 percent at 
80.671 after hitting its lowest in about 1-1/2 weeks. 
    For a full report, double click on  USD/  
    - - - -  
    TREASURIES  
    NEW YORK - U.S. Treasury debt prices were little changed to 
slightly lower on Monday in thin trading, after a rally the 
previous session following a soft U.S. non-farm payrolls report, 
with markets looking to this week's heavy supply on both the 
short and long-end. 
    Benchmark 10-year Treasuries    were last flat in 
price to yield 2.67 percent, down from 2.69 percent last Friday. 
Thirty-year bonds    also slipped 1/32 to yield 3.66 
percent, down from 3.68 percent the previous session. 
    For a full report, double click on  US/  
    - - - -  
    COMMODITIES  
    GOLD 
    LONDON - Gold rose on Monday after a weak U.S. jobs report 
last week raised questions over economic recovery, which could 
potentially slow the pace of the Federal Reserve's stimulus 
tapering. 
    Spot gold    rose 0.6 percent to $1,274.60 an ounce by 
1524 GMT, after gaining 1.9 percent in the previous week, its 
largest weekly increase since Jan. 3. 
    U.S. gold futures    for February delivery were up 
$11.50 to $1,274.40 an ounce. 
    For a full report, double click on  GOL/  
    - - - -  
    BASE METALS 
    LONDON - Copper dipped on Monday, following a weekly rise 
that was the biggest so far this year last week, as worries 
about demand in top consumer China and expectations of tighter 
U.S. monetary policy offset tightness in supply. 
    Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange    fell 
0.64 percent to $7,095 a tonne at the close. Prices last week 
recouped 1 percent but were still down some 3 percent for the 
year to date. 
    For a full report, double click on  MET/L  
    - - - -  
    OIL 
    NEW YORK - Brent oil eased after hitting a five-week high on 
Monday, pressured by increased supplies from Libya and the North 
Sea and as investors awaited direction from the new head of the 
U.S. Federal Reserve on the course of the central bank's 
monetary policy. 
    March Brent crude    was down 54 cents at $109.03 a 
barrel at 12:44 p.m. EST (1744 GMT), after reaching a high of 
$109.75, its loftiest since Jan. 2. 
    The March contract expires at the end of trading on 
Thursday. Brent oil for April delivery was trading 49 cents 
lower at $108.36. 
    U.S. crude    was up 40 cents at $100.28, after rising 
to $100.55, a 2014 high. 
    For a full report, double click on  O/R  
    - - - - 
((Australia/New Zealand bureaux; +61 2 9373 1800/+64 4 802 
7980)) 
 
 
Keywords: MORNINGCALL/  
     
URN: 
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