Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Eurozone debt dominates markets, stocks struggle (AFP)

LONDON (AFP) ? The fast-moving eurozone debt drama hit global markets for a second day on Tuesday, with the euro down, rates in high risk bonds up and stocks struggling to claw back losses.

European stocks rallied slightly in late trading after two days of big losses and on Wall Street, trading in shares was mixed.

The stock retreat faltered just as eurozone leaders hinted at a crisis summit meeting in the next few days and the Italian finance minister left a meeting in Brussels to work urgently on Italian budget reforms.

The eurozone debt crisis, which had sparked international bailouts of Ireland, Greece and Portugal last year, is now spreading tentacles around big EU economies in Italy and Spain. Analysts now discuss openly the possibility that the eurozone could begin breaking up.

The benchmark FTSE 100 index of top shares in London closed with a loss of 1.02 percent to 5,968.96 points.

In Frankfurt, the DAX index shed 0.78 percent at 7,174.14 points and in Paris the CAC 40 lost 0.98 percent to 3,770.21 points.

In mid-day trading on Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average was showing a gain of 0.07 percent, with analysts saying the eurozone crisis was weighing heavily on sentiment.

Markets finished sharply lower across Asia on Tuesday.

The Milan stock market, which slumped on Monday, rallied to show a closing gain of 1.18 percent. The Spanish Ibex-35 index closed with a loss of 0.70 percent, after a 4.0-percent slump on Monday.

The euro was at 1.3999 dollars in late trading here, having dropped to a four-month low point against the dollar, from 1.4029 at the close on Monday.

"What looked like a bloodbath this morning has eased off a little as we progress through the European session. Pressures continue to mount for both Italy and Spain," said Kathleen Brooks of Forex.com

Brooks said that "rumours suggest that the ECB stepped into the market and bought Italian debt, which has taken the edge off Italian bonds causing the yield to moderate to 5.8 per cent."

Yields on Italian and Spanish 10-year bonds flirted with new record high levels, putting borrowing effectively out of reach.

A deep split emerged over the critical issue of private investors shouldering part of the cost of a second rescue for Greece, which rating agencies say would trigger a default rating, and which the European Central Bank says would lead it to cut off Greek banks.

Greece said it would not accept any form of default, and Spain strongly attacked the way the whole issue had been raised, saying it was not settled yet, despite reassuring statements from the eurozone overnight on Monday.

There is concern about the impact of any default rating on European banks which hold sovereign debt, and the European Commission said it would support any EU banks failing stress tests on Friday.

But European bank shares were weak.

Brooks said: "Once investors know if they have to take the hit or the EU will act as the backstop in any financial crisis, then investors will be happy to buy the bonds. Markets hate uncertainty and a lack of clarity on this point has led to contagion rippling through the larger economies of Europe."

Investec economist, Philip Shaw said: "Italy?s fortunes have been made worse by political differences and by rumours of Italian banks failing the stress tests, but despite this, attention on Italy looks to be contagion, rather than fundamentally driven."

"What we are witnessing, and will soon be suffering from, are the inept attempts by politicians and central bankers to duck the consequences of the financial crisis," said analyst David Morrison at trading firm GFT.

"They have done everything to try and delay the eventual day of reckoning which must result from dealing with global imbalances, the developed world's debt burden and some serious rot at the heart of our financial system.

He added: "Now the crisis in Europe has escalated sharply and the rescue facilities currently in place are not robust enough to help. On top of that, the US recovery has fallen flat on its face."

The euro fell against the yen to 111.34 yen from 112.61 on Monday. The dollar fell to 79.51 yen from 80.24.

The Swiss franc rose to 1.1665 francs and it fell to 0.8331 francs for one dollar.

Sterling rose to 87.85 pence for one euro and rose to 1.5940 dollars.

The price of gold was at 1,550.50 dollars an ounce from 1,555.50 dollars on Friday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110712/bs_afp/worldstocksforex

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