RPT-New Zealand/Australia Morning Call-Global markets

Wed, 15 Jan - 4:20am
 (Repeats to additional subscribers) 
----------------------(07:18 / 1818 GMT)----------------------- 
  
 Stock Markets                                                   
S&P/ASX 200    5,212.05  -80.03  NZSX 50        4,865.16  -34.24 
DJIA          16,346.01  +88.07  Nikkei        15,422.40 -489.66 
NASDAQ         4,174.63  +61.33  FTSE           6,766.86   +9.71 
S&P 500        1,835.70  +16.50  Hang Seng     22,791.28  -97.48 
SPI 200 Fut    5,196.00  +22.00  TRJCRB Index     276.98   +0.88 
 
 Bonds                                                           
AU 10 YR Bond     4.238  +0.039  US 10 YR Bond     2.869  +0.044 
NZ 10 YR Bond     4.690  +0.000  US 30 YR Bond     3.800  +0.034 
 
 Currencies (Prev at 7pm NZST)                                   
AUD US$          0.8973  0.9037  NZD US$          0.8390  0.8377 
EUR US$          1.3683  1.3662  Yen US$          103.98  103.43 
 
 Commodities                                                     
Gold (Lon)      1251.50          Silver (Lon)     20.270         
Gold (NY)       1253.06          Light Crude       92.74         
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
 Overnight market action with latest New York figures. 
 
    EQUITIES 
    NEW YORK - U.S. stocks rose on Tuesday, erasing much of the 
previous session's steep drop, as December retail sales rose 
more than expected and investors digested earnings from major 
financial firms. 
    The Dow Jones industrial average    was up 94.72 points, 
or 0.58 percent, at 16,352.66. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index 
   was up 17.76 points, or 0.98 percent, at 1,836.96. The 
Nasdaq Composite Index    was up 63.88 points, or 1.55 
percent, at 4,177.19.  
    For a full report, double click on  .N  
    - - - -  
    LONDON - Britain's top share index steadied near two-month 
highs on Tuesday, with a sell-off in financials offset by a crop 
of solid updates in the healthcare and retail sectors. 
    The FTSE 100 closed up 0.1 percent at 6,766.86 points, 
failing to hold onto an earlier two-month intraday high of 
6,772.63 points. 
    For a full report, double click on  .L  
    - - - -  
    TOKYO - Japan's Nikkei average tumbled 3.1 percent to a 
one-month low on Tuesday, posting the biggest one-day drop in 
five months after the yen rose sharply following a 
weaker-than-expected U.S. payrolls report. 
    The Nikkei    ended 489.66 points lower at 15,422.40 
after hitting as low as 15,383.69, its lowest level since Dec. 
18. It was the biggest daily percentage drop since Aug. 7. 
    The broader Topix    dropped 2.3 percent to 1,269.08, 
with all of its 33 subsectors in negative territory. 
    For a full report, double click on  .T  
    - - - -  
    FOREIGN EXCHANGE  
    NEW YORK - Stronger-than-expected December U.S. retail sales 
data and a record Japanese current account deficit helped push 
the U.S. dollar higher against the yen on Tuesday while mixed 
signals among European central bankers kept the euro in check. 
    In mid-morning U.S. activity the dollar traded up 0.60 
percent to 103.60 yen   , recovering after a more than 1 
percent drop on Monday that saw it hit a roughly one-month low 
of 102.85 yen. 
    For a full report, double click on  USD/  
    - - - -  
    TREASURIES  
    NEW YORK - U.S. Treasury debt prices fell on Tuesday after a 
gauge of U.S. consumer spending rose more than expected in 
December, suggesting the economy gathered steam at the end of 
last year and was poised for stronger growth in 2014. 
    Benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury notes    were last 
trading down 7/32 in price to yield 2.861 percent, up from 2.825 
percent late Monday. They have fallen from a high of 2.967 
percent on Friday before the jobs data was released. 
    Thirty-year bonds    fell 10/32 in price to yield 
3.799 percent, up from 3.766 percent. 
    For a full report, double click on  US/  
    - - - -  
    COMMODITIES  
    GOLD 
    LONDON - Gold rose to its highest level in a month on 
Tuesday due to a drop in equities and uncertainty over the U.S. 
growth outlook after a disappointing jobs report last week. 
    Spot gold    was up 0.1 percent to $1,254.00 an ounce by 
1536 GMT, while U.S. gold futures    for February delivery 
were up 0.2 percent at $1,253.70 an ounce. 
    For a full report, double click on  GOL/  
    - - - -  
    BASE METALS 
    LONDON - Copper dipped on Tuesday due to a firming dollar 
and caution over growth prospects for the world's top copper 
consumer China, but a shortfall of metal in the physical markets 
and upbeat U.S. data helped limit losses. 
    Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange    was 
last bid down 0.67 percent at $7,280 a tonne, down from $7,329 
at the close on Monday. Copper is down about half a percent this 
year, following falls of 7 percent last year. 
    For a full report, double click on  MET/L  
    - - - -  
    OIL 
    NEW YORK - U.S oil rose by $1 on Tuesday as traders squared 
positions amid some signs of strength in the U.S. economy, while 
Brent fell as incremental increases in Libyan oil supply and 
expectations that Iranian crude will return to market weighed on 
prices. 
    The February Brent crude    contract, which expires on 
Thursday, traded 38 cents lower at $106.37 at 12:50 p.m. EST 
(1750 GMT), after slipping 50 cents in the previous session. 
    U.S. crude    traded up 96 cents at $92.76, a day after 
dropping 92 cents. Oil has fallen from is perch at $100 a barrel 
at the end of last year. 
    For a full report, double click on  O/R  
    - - - - 
((Australia/New Zealand bureaux; +61 2 9373 1800/+64 4 802 
7980)) 
 
 
Keywords: MORNINGCALL/  
     
URN: 
urn:newsml:reuters.com:20140114:nL3N0KO4G4:3
Topics: 
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