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(Repeats to more codes) -----------------------(07:15 / 1815 GMT)----------------------- Stock Markets S&P/ASX 200 5,317.57 -11.83 NZSX 50 5,088.03 +8.70 DJIA 16,235.66 +169.99 Nikkei 14,277.67 -49.99 NASDAQ 4,286.02 +40.62 FTSE 6,568.35 +40.46 S&P 500 1,858.01 +16.88 Hang Seng 21,473.95 -65.54 SPI 200 Fut 5,345.00 +23.00 TRJCRB Index 300.99 -1.89 Bonds AU 10 YR Bond 4.080 +0.020 US 10 YR Bond 2.688 +0.043 NZ 10 YR Bond 4.540 +0.000 US 30 YR Bond 3.624 +0.037 Currencies (Prev at 7pm NZST) AUD US$ 0.9094 0.9050 NZD US$ 0.8570 0.8545 EUR US$ 1.3920 1.3902 Yen US$ 101.65 101.61 Commodities Gold (Lon) 1378.50 Silver (Lon) 21.220 Gold (NY) 1381.74 Light Crude 97.96 --------------------------------------------------------------- - Overnight market action with latest New York figures. EQUITIES NEW YORK - U.S. stocks climbed on Monday, with the S&P 500 bouncing from its worst weekly drop in the past seven as concerns eased over the situation in Crimea, even as the region voted to join Russia. The Dow Jones industrial averagerose 175.16 points or 1.09 percent, to 16,240.83, the S&P 500 gained 17.02 points or 0.92 percent, to 1,858.15 and the Nasdaq Composite added 43.086 points or 1.01 percent, to 4,288.483. For a full report, double click on .N - - - - LONDON - Britain's top share index looked set to snap its longest losing streak in 2-1/2 years on Monday after the building sector surged on a government plan to pump more cash into a scheme to boost construction. The promise of better profits in the sector, one of the best-performing this year, helped the FTSE 100add 0.7 percent to 6,575.76 points, bouncing off Friday's one-month low after a week in which it fell 2.8 percent. (Full Story) For a full report, double click on .L - - - - TOKYO - Japan's Nikkei share average stumbled to a 6-week low on Monday as escalating tensions in Ukraine soured investor sentiment, although SoftBank Corpjumped after its affiliate said it would go public in the United States. The Nikkei slipped 0.4 percent to 14,277.67, hitting its lowest closing level since February 6. The benchmark tumbled 3.3 percent on Friday and shed 6.2 percent last week, marking the biggest weekly drop since last June. For a full report, double click on .T - - - - FOREIGN EXCHANGE NEW YORK - The safe-haven yen fell broadly on Monday after the United States and the European Union imposed what investors perceived to be modest economic sanctions on some officials of Russia and Ukraine following Crimea's vote to join Moscow over the weekend. In mid-morning trading, the dollar rose 0.4 percent against the yento 101.76 yen, rising after four days of losses as investors had bought the safe-haven Japanese currency in the midst of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. For a full report, double click on USD/ - - - - TREASURIES NEW YORK - U.S. Treasuries fell in price on Monday after Sunday's referendum in Crimea passed without major violence, reducing safety demand for U.S. government bonds, and before the Federal Reserve's highly anticipated meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday. Benchmark 10-year notesfell 8/32 in price on Monday to yield 2.67 percent, in the middle of a two-month long range that has kept yields between 2.57 percent and 2.82 percent. For a full report, double click on US/ - - - - COMMODITIES GOLD LONDON - Gold prices briefly hit their highest in six months on Monday as appetite for risk remained cautious following Crimea's vote to break from Ukraine and Western countries' sanctions on Moscow and Kiev officials. Spot goldhit its highest since Sept. 9 at $1,391.76 an ounce in earlier trade but was at $1,380.85, down 0.1 percent, by 1455 GMT, as equity markets regained some strength. For a full report, double click on GOL/ - - - - BASE METALS LONDON - Copper was steady on Monday with buyers attracted by low prices after a sharp drop last week, but persistent concerns about top consumer China's growth outlook kept the metal within sight of the near four-year low it hit last week. Benchmark three-month copperon the London Metal Exchange closed at $6,479 a tonne, off an intraday low of $6,410 a tonne and up a touch from a last bid of $6,468.50 on Friday. For a full report, double click on MET/L - - - - OIL NEW YORK - Brent oil futures fell by nearly $2 per barrel on Monday as ample global supplies outweighed concerns over continued tensions between Russia and the West over the fate of Crimea. U.S. crude futuresfell $1.16 cents to $97.73 per barrel by 1700 GMT, having fallen gradually by more than $1 in the hour after Obama's comments. Brent crude futures fell $1.54 to $106.67 per barrel after tumbling by nearly $2 after Obama's brief address. For a full report, double click on O/R - - - - ((Australia/New Zealand bureaux; +61 2 9373 1800/+64 4 802 7980)) Keywords: MORNINGCALL/