UPDATE 1-New Zealand/Australia Morning Call-Global markets

Tue, 14 Jan - 5:45am
-----------------------(06:45 / 1945 GMT)----------------------- 
 Stock Markets                                                   
S&P/ASX 200    5,292.08  -20.31  NZSX 50        4,899.40  +35.01 
DJIA          16,305.57 -131.48  Nikkei        15,912.06  +31.73 
NASDAQ         4,130.47  -44.20  FTSE           6,757.15  +17.21 
S&P 500        1,825.30  -17.07  Hang Seng     22,888.76  +42.51 
SPI 200 Fut    5,222.00  -39.00  TRJCRB Index     276.10   +0.68 
 
 Bonds                                                           
AU 10 YR Bond     4.195  -0.045  US 10 YR Bond     2.823  -0.037 
NZ 10 YR Bond     4.690  +0.000  US 30 YR Bond     3.766  -0.030 
 
 Currencies (Prev at 7pm NZST)                                   
AUD US$          0.9064  0.9026  NZD US$          0.8372  0.8330 
EUR US$          1.3668  1.3669  Yen US$          102.92  103.45 
 
 Commodities                                                     
Gold (Lon)      1248.00          Silver (Lon)     20.090         
Gold (NY)       1246.70          Light Crude       91.61         
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
 Overnight market action with latest New York figures. 
 
    EQUITIES 
    NEW YORK - U.S. stocks fell to session lows in afternoon 
trade on Monday, with the 10 S&P 500 industry groups posting 
losses in widespread selling. 
    The Dow Jones industrial average    fell 90.46 points or 
0.55 percent, to 16,346.59, the S&P 500    lost 11.12 points 
or 0.6 percent, to 1,831.25 and the Nasdaq Composite    
dropped 22.868 points or 0.55 percent, to 4,151.797. 
    For a full report, double click on  .N  
    - - - -  
    LONDON - A rally in banking shares helped Britain's FTSE 100 
.FTSE rise to a two-month closing high on Monday as investors 
welcomed the prospect of lighter rules on leverage for the 
sector. 
    Banks added 9.2 points to the FTSE 100   , which rose 
17.21 points, or 0.3 percent, to 6,757.15 points, its highest 
closing level since Nov. 7.  
    For a full report, double click on  .L  
    - - - -  
    TOKYO - Japanese markets were closed for a public holiday on 
Monday. The Nikkei    ended 0.2 percent higher at 15,912.06 
on Friday. 
    For a full report, double click on  .T  
    - - - -  
    SYDNEY - Australian stocks are set for a soft start on 
Tuesday following a weak session on Wall Street with investgors 
there waiting for a flurry of earnings results and doubts about 
economic growth. 
    Australian stock futures    are down 0.8 percent at 
5,221.0, a 71.07 point discount to the underlying S&P/ASX 200 
index    which fell 0.4 percent to a three week low of 
5,292.1 on Monday. 
    For full report, double click on  .AX  
    - - - -  
    FOREIGN EXCHANGE      
    NEW YORK - The dollar dropped to its lowest in four weeks 
against the yen on Monday as last week's soft U.S. jobs data 
dampened optimism about the outlook for the world's largest 
economy and fueled uncertainty as to the pace of the Federal 
Reserve's reduction in stimulus. 
    In early New York trading, the dollar slid nearly 1.0 
percent against the yen to 103.13 yen, after earlier falling to 
102.97   , its lowest level since Dec. 18. 
    For a full report, double click on  USD/  
    - - - -  
    TREASURIES  
    NEW YORK - U.S. Treasuries prices rose on Monday, extending 
Friday's rally as investors reduced bullish expectations for 
economic growth after employers added far fewer jobs in December 
than traders and economists had expected. 
    Five-year notes    were last up 4/32 in price to 
yield 1.592 percent, down from a high of 1.755 percent on Friday 
before the jobs data. 
    Benchmark 10-year notes    rose 6/32 in price to 
yield 2.831 percent, down from a high of 2.967 percent on 
Friday. Thirty-year bonds    increased 13/32 in price 
to yield 3.7775 percent, down from Friday's high of 3.891 
percent. 
    For a full report, double click on  US/  
    - - - -  
    COMMODITIES  
    GOLD 
    LONDON - Gold steadied on Monday off an earlier one-month 
high, with a rally sparked by last week's weak U.S. jobs data 
running out of steam as analysts predicted the Federal Reserve 
will continue tapering monetary stimulus. 
    Spot gold    was up 0.1 percent to $1,248.46 an ounce at 
1457 GMT, while U.S. gold futures    for February delivery 
rose $1.20 an ounce at $1,248.30.  
    For a full report, double click on  GOL/  
    - - - -  
    BASE METALS 
    LONDON - Nickel rose on Monday to hit a two-week high, 
adding to Friday's near 4 percent gains, as a ban on unprocessed 
ore exports from Indonesia, the world's biggest nickel ore 
exporter, came into effect. 
    Three-month nickel    on the London Metal Exchange 
climbed $14,216 a tonne, its highest level since Dec. 30 before 
closing at $14,210 a tonne from $13,860 at the close on Friday. 
    For a full report, double click on  MET/L  
    - - - -  
    OIL 
    NEW YORK - Brent oil fell on Monday as the market absorbed 
news of a deal between Western nations and Iran to curb its 
nuclear program and the resumption of production from a key 
North Sea oilfield. 
    Brent crude for February delivery    fell 30 cents to 
$106.95 per barrel by 11:51 a.m. EST (1651 GMT). The contract 
had settled 86 cents higher on Friday. U.S. crude    slipped 
75 cents to $91.97 per barrel, after closing $1.06 higher on 
Friday. 
    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:20140113:nL3N0KN41K:3
Topics: 
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