Sunday, 16 June 2013

Asian shares reverse losses, capped before Fed meeting

(Reuters) - Asian shares recouped early losses on Monday but prices were capped as investors settled in to wait for the U.S. Federal Reserve meeting outcome later in the week - and some long-awaited clarity on its intentions for monetary stimulus.
Uncertainty over the Fed's future policy course has triggered a sharp sell-off in broad risk assets over the past few weeks, offering dip buying levels for some Asian equities.
Wall Street fell on Friday for its third negative week in four as investors took profits from recent gains, while data showed the U.S. economic recovery was still not strong enough to warrant an imminent change in the Fed's current position.
"Market players both domestic and overseas are taking a wait-and-see stance," said Kim Young-il, a market analyst at Daishin Securities, of South Korean shares .KS11 which traded nearly flat but hovered near a seven-month low hit last week.
"The market at its current level, however, has limited room for further downward moves. Valuations are cheap," Kim added.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan.MIAPJ0000PUS erased earlier losses to rise 0.5 percent. It advanced 1.6 percent on Friday for its best daily gain since January 2, but ended the week down 1.3 percent after tumbling to its lowest since September on Thursday.
Australian shares .AXJO regained positive territory to rise 0.4 percent from a 1 percent drop earlier in the session. They posted their biggest one-day rise in 18 months on Friday.
Still, investors remained wary ahead of the Fed policy meeting over Tuesday and Wednesday, where the central bank may conceivably taper its massive bond-buying program as long as the economy is showing some improvement.
Data on Friday showed May industrial output was unchanged, below a 0.2 percent forecast rise, while Thomson Reuters and University of Michigan's index of U.S. consumer sentiment unexpectedly fell from a near six-year high in early June.
The U.S. economy may not be picking up much steam but it was also not facing deflationary pressure, with the producer price index up 0.5 percent last month, above a 0.1 percent gain forecast.
"Although no change in policy settings is expected, the ability of Fed Chairman Bernanke to communicate effectively the Fed's strategy over 'tapering' will be crucial to determine whether market volatility persists or lessens," analysts at Credit Agricole CIB said in a research note.
The dollar was top-heavy against a basket of six major currencies, trading up 0.06 percent .DXY but staying near a four-month low of 80.50 hit on Thursday.
Goldman Sachs said in a research report that despite moderate growth in the United States relative to the rest of the world, the latest TIC data released last week indicated a lack of any notable capital inflows, which, along with the persistent trade deficit, remains negative for the dollar.
The dollar recovered against the yen, however, rising 0.5 percent to 94.57 and helping improve sentiment for Japan's benchmark Nikkei stock average .N225, which rose 1.2 percent after opening lower. .T
The dollar hit a 10-week low of 93.75 yen on Thursday, bringing it down nearly 10 percent from last month's 4-1/2-year peak of 103.74 yen. The dollar ended last week down 3.4 percent for its biggest weekly loss since July 2009.
The dollar's loss against the yen has also been linked to speculators and investors cutting back their yen short positions after the Bank of Japan took no action to quell a highly volatile domestic bond market last week, sparking a sell-off in the Nikkei and erasing gains made since the central bank's big-bang stimulus unveiled on April 4, which had helped propel the index up to a 5-1/2-year high last month.
"The reaction to the BOJ's no-action brought the dollar/yen and Nikkei back to levels before the bazooka stimulus in April, leaving markets wondering whether the BOJ's 2 percent inflation target is achievable without a weak yen," said an official at a Japanese institutional investor.
On the interest rate front, India's central bank will announce its rate decision later in the session, coming after central banks in the Philippines and South Korea held rates steady last week amid the spike in global risk aversion.
U.S. crude futures fell 0.3 percent at $97.53 a barrel and Brent eased 0.2 percent to $105.76. <O/R>
London copper rose 0.9 percent to $7,151 a ton on short covering following its steepest weekly decline in two months last week, ahead of the Fed meeting.

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Solar-powered plane lands near Washington

WASHINGTON (AP) — A solar-powered plane nearing the finale of a cross-continental journey at Dulles International Airport outside the nation's capital before dawn Sunday, with only one leg to New York remaining.
Solar Impulse's website said the aircraft with its massive wings and thousands of photovoltaic cells "gracefully touched down" at 12:15 a.m. EDT after 14 hours and four minutes of flight from Cincinnati to Dulles in Washington's northern Virginia suburbs.
Pilot Bertrand Piccard was at the controls for the last time on the multi-leg journey that began in California in May. His colleague, Andre Borschberg, is expected to fly the last leg from Washington to New York City's John F. Kennedy International Airport in early July, the web site added.
It's the first bid by a solar plane capable of being airborne day and night without fuel to fly across the U.S, at speeds reaching about 40 mph. The plane began May 3 in San Francisco, flying via Arizona, Texas, Missouri and Ohio on to Dulles.
Organizers said in a blog post early Sunday that Piccard hopscotched over the Appalachian mountain chain on a 435-mile (700-kilometer) course from Cincinnati to the Washington area, averaging 31 mph (50 kph). It was the second stint of a final leg that began in St. Louis.
The plane, considered the world's most advanced sun-powered aircraft, is powered by about 12,000 photovoltaic cells that cover its enormous wings and charge its batteries during the day.
The single-seat Solar Impulse flies around 40 mph and can't go through clouds; weighing about as much as a car, the aircraft also took longer than a car to complete the journey from Ohio to the East Coast.
The plane also is vulnerable to bad weather.
Organizers said fog at Cincinnati Municipal Lunken Airport was a concern that required the ground crew's attention before takeoff just after 10 a.m. Saturday. The crew gave the plane a gentle wipe-down with cloths because of condensation that had formed on the wings.
"The solar airplane was in great shape despite the quasi-shower it experienced" before takeoff from Cincinnati, the web site said.
Washington was the first East Coast stop before the final leg to New York expected in early July.
Organizers said the leg to the nation's capital was an emotional one for Piccard as it was his last on the cross-country flying mission he shared with Borschberg.
At each stop along the way, the plane has stayed several days, wowing visitors. Organizers said a public viewing of the aircraft would be held for several hours Sunday afternoon at Dulles.
As the plane's creators, Piccard and Borschberg, have said their trip is the first attempt by a solar airplane capable of flying day and night without fuel to fly across America. They also called it another aviation milestone in hopes that the journey would whet greater interest in clean technologies and renewable energy.
Piccard and Borschberg have said the project's ultimate goal is to fly a sun-powered aircraft around the world with a second-generation plane now in development. They say they are aiming for such a mission in 2015.

Saturday, 15 June 2013

Gold price today: Latest updates

Gold prices extended their yesterday's gains by Rs 46 to Rs 27,857 per ten grams in futures trade Saturday as market players continued to enlarge their exposures, moving in tandem with a firming global trend. 

At the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX), gold for delivery in June edged higher by Rs 46 to Rs 27,857 per ten grams against its previous close of Rs 27,811.

Similarly, silver for delivery in July traded up by Rs 47 at Rs 43,835 per kg.

Gold price in overseas markets, which normally set price trend on the domestic front, rose about 0.3 percent on the week. It has now posted gains in three of the last four weeks following a historic two-day selloff in mid-April.

Resilient demand for coins and bars and a pullback in the US equities market lifted gold on the day and for the week on Friday.

Spot gold last traded up 0.2 percent at USD 1,388.16 an ounce.

In New York, gold for August delivery gained USD 9.80 or 0.7 percent to settle at USD 1,387.60 an ounce on the Comex division of the NYMEX.

US data on Friday showed consumer sentiment edged off a six-year high in June, while manufacturing output picked up a bit last month after two straight months of declines, suggesting the economy remains on a moderate growth path.

Markets will watch closely the US Federal Reserve policy meeting on June 18 and 19. 

Gold prices sank to around USD 1,321 on April 16, the lowest in more than two years, in a sell-off that surprised ardent gold investors and bulls.

In Delhi spot market, both the precious metals, gold and silver prices fell back owing to slackened demand at prevailing higher levels amid a weak global trend.

While gold fell by Rs 360 to Rs 28,190 per 10 grams, silver lost by Rs 700 to Rs 44,000 per kg on reduced offtake by jewellery fabricators and industrial units.

Chennai

Standard gold prices declined by Rs 425 to Rs 27,750 per ten grams as against its previous close of Rs 28,175.

Similarly, silver prices dropped by Rs 655 to Rs 43,380 per kg from Rs 44,035.

Delhi

In the national capital, gold of 99.9 and 99.5 percent purity fell by Rs 360 each to Rs 28,190 and Rs 27,990 per 10 grams, respectively. The metal had climbed by Rs 360 yesterday. Sovereigns followed suit and shed Rs 100 to Rs 24,300 per piece of eight grams.

Silver ready dropped by Rs 700 to Rs 44,000 per kg and weekly-based delivery by Rs 625 to Rs 43,285 per kg. The white metal had gained Rs 500 in the previous session.

Silver coins also plunged by Rs 1000 to Rs 79,000 for buying and Rs 80,000 for selling of 100 pieces. 

Mumbai

Standard gold of 99.5 percent purity was down by Rs 190 to end at Rs 27,670 per 10 gm from Thursday's closing level of Rs 27,860.

Pure gold of 99.9 percent purity lost by Rs 185 to finish at Rs 27,810 per 10 gm from Rs 27,995.

Silver ready (.999 fineness) declined by Rs 275 to close at Rs 44,335 per kg compared to previous closing of Rs 44,610.

Futures Trade (MCX)

At the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX), gold for delivery in June edged higher by Rs 46 to Rs 27,857 per ten grams against its previous close of Rs 27,811.

Similarly, silver for delivery in July traded up by Rs 47 at Rs 43,835 per kg.

International markets

Spot gold last traded up 0.2 percent at USD 1,388.16 an ounce.

In New York, gold for August delivery gained USD 9.80 or 0.7 percent to settle at USD 1,387.60 an ounce on the Comex division of the NYMEX.

Gold prices sank to around USD 1,321 on April 16, the lowest in more than two years, in a sell-off that surprised ardent gold investors and bulls.

Gold ETF

SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, said its holdings fell 0.63 percent to 1,003.53 tonnes on Thursday to fresh four-year low.

Here are the city wise gold and silver rates:

(Gold rates per 10 gm/Silver rates per Kg)

Mumbai
GOLD: Rs 27,810 (-185) / SILVER: Rs 44,335 (-275)

Delhi
GOLD: Rs 28,190 (-360) / SILVER: Rs 44,000 (-700)

Chennai
GOLD: Rs 27,750 (-425) / SILVER: Rs 43,380 (-655)

Kolkata
GOLD: Rs 27,955 (-400) / SILVER: Rs 43,550 (-550)

Bangalore
GOLD: Rs 28,077 (-240) / SILVER: Rs 44,200 (- 400)

Hyderabad
GOLD: Rs 28,400 / SILVER: Rs 45,000 
NEWS SOURCE:http://zeenews.india.com

Friday, 14 June 2013

Airbus A350 Takes to the Air in First Test


The first flight for the Airbus A350, the plane maker’s answer to Boeing’s (BA) 787 Dreamliner, has occurred today in France. The flight was a milestone in the sense thatAirbus (EAD) was working to have the plane airborne ahead of the Paris Air Show, which will open on June 17. The plane—designated MSN1—is expected to receive a year or more of flight testing and engineering modifications ahead of its regulatory certification and delivery to the first customer, Qatar Airways, in the second half of 2014.
The A350, like its rival predecessor, Boeing’s 787, promises airlines an efficiency boost via an abundance of carbon fiber composites used in construction. Not only are these newer materials lighter, thereby cutting fuel burn, they resist the corrosive effects common to traditional metal airframes, thus requiring less maintenance.

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Tokyo Stocks Tumble 6.4%, Enters Bear Market

TOKYO--Tokyo's Nikkei Stock Average tumbled 6.4% Thursday, turning the once high-flying shares into a bear market amid concerns that a winding down of the U.S. Federal Reserve's easing program will hit global growth.
It was the sixth loss for the market in the last seven sessions as falling equity prices and declines in the dollar-yen exchange rate fed off each other, depressing both. The dollar was at Y94.34 at the stock market's close, down from Y96.08 in late New York trading Wednesday.
Shares are now more than 20.4% below the year's closing high of 15627.26 reached on May 22, a level commonly seen as a bear market, suggesting further declines ahead.
The selloff began from the opening bell, with traders citing nervousness that the Fed will reduce its monthly bond purchases in the coming months, removing a key stock-market support.
"There is no clear downside target unless there is more clarity over the Fed's policy," said Shigeo Sugawara, senior investment manager at Sompo Japan Nipponkoa Asset Management.
Losses gathered pace as falls in the stock market pushed the dollar down against the yen, which in turn contributed to further selling in equities.
"The severity of the current market correction is difficult to fully predict, as the dollar's rise from November was simply too much, too fast," said Takako Masai, head of market research at Shinsei Bank.
The markets have been highly volatile since late May after doubts began to emerge about how well Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's economic program would pull Japan out of its years of stagnation.
The sharp slide in shares comes as a harsh end to a nearly unprecedented rally that saw the market rise more than 80% since mid-November. The start of the euphoria came when Mr. Abe, then running for office, began to talk of the need for massive monetary easing to pull Japan out of 15 years of deflation that has sapped growth. That sent the yen lower--good news for Japan's exporting industrial giants.
But some stock traders said Japan's economy--which has been showing solid growth--isn't the market's main concern.
"The issue for stocks is less about 'Abenomics' and more about an ongoing correction in the currency market, in which the dollar and yen are still trying to find appropriate levels while factoring in overseas central-bank policy," said SMBC Nikko Securities general manager of equities, Hiroichi Nishi.
Traders said that despite the wild price swings, trading volume was actually light with just 3.26 billion shares, worth Y2.7 trillion, changing hands on the TSE's first section, or Topix, a sign that big foreign funds were not behind the selling.
"The numbers suggest there is a lack of foreign institutional players in the market," said an equity trading director at a foreign brokerage.

Write to Brad Frischkorn at bradford.frischkorn@dowjones.com

Wednesday, 12 June 2013

U.S. Stocks Close Lower

--Stocks end the day broadly lower
--DJIA down 126.79; S&P 500 falls 13.61
--All 10 S&P 500 sectors lower
   By Alexandra Scaggs 
NEW YORK--U.S. stocks closed broadly lower Wednesday, with the Dow Industrials posting their first three-day string of losses this year.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 126.79 points, or 0.8%, to 14995.23. On Tuesday, the Dow fell 117 points, or 0.8%, for the fourth triple-digit loss in two weeks.
The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index declined 13.61 points, or 0.8%, to 1612.52. All 10 sectors were lower. The Nasdaq Composite Index fell 36.52 points, or 1.1%, to 3400.43.
Shares staged a sharp rebound from Tuesday's losses in the first minutes of trading Wednesday, with the Dow industrials advancing as many as 119 points. But the rally quickly lost steam, and shares turned lower in afternoon trading.
"This is a very thin market," said Tim Hoyle, director of research with the Haverford Trust Co., which oversees around $7 billion of assets. "There are very little long-term investors, and it's very much fast-money trading. The market had a year's worth of gains in four months...We're seeing the markets digest that."
Stocks, bonds and currencies world-wide have made sharp moves in recent weeks as investors became concerned that the Federal Reserve would start to roll back its bond-buying program. Blue-chip stocks have made seven triple-digit swings in the past 11 sessions, after a steady climb in the first months of the year. The market's so-called "fear gauge," the CBOE Volatility Index, rose to 8.4% to 18.50, its second-highest close of the year.
"Volatility coming back to the market doesn't surprise us," said Mr. Hoyle. "We're due for a little bit."
Haverford is buying technology and health-care shares, and has cut back on some holdings in big dividend payers in recent weeks--the firm halved its holdings in Kimberly-Clark, for example. Its shares were lower midday on the New York Stock Exchange.
"That's the part of the market most at risk to an extreme dislocation, or a correction because of moves the Fed will make," Mr. Hoyle said.
With no major economic news out Wednesday, and many investors reluctant to make big moves ahead of next week's key Federal Reserve policy meeting, short-term traders were taking their cue from the dollar's moves against the yen. On Wednesday, as the dollar fell as low as 95.13 yen from Y96.02, stocks tracked the exchange rate lower.
With the quiet day for data, "everyone's watching these macro trends in the market," said Michael O'Rourke, chief market strategist for JonesTrading.
Still, even with the currency swings, "there's no panic out there," he said.
In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 reversed early gains to close 0.4% lower, despite better-than-expected euro-zone data. Industrial production in the euro zone increased 0.4% in April, beating forecasts.
Some focus remained on the German Constitutional Court, which was meeting for a second and final day to rule on the legality of the European Central Bank's bond-buying program.
Asian markets closed mostly lower, but there was a sharp bounce off lows for Japanese stocks. The Nikkei Stock Average was down as much as 2.4% before recovering to close down 0.2%. A weakening of the yen helped boost exporter shares. The recent volatility in Japanese stocks has added to investor jitters around the world.
Elsewhere in Asia, Australia's S&P ASX 200 lost 0.6%. Mainland Chinese markets were closed for a holiday.
July crude oil futures rose 0.5% to settle at $95.88 a barrel, while June gold futures gained 1.1% to settle at $1,391.80 a troy ounce. Demand rose for the 10-year Treasury, pushing yields up to settle at 2.231%.
In corporate news, Health Management Associates rose 11% after an activist shareholder took a more active role in the hospital operator's management, pushing for a relaxing of investor limits and signaling interest in board changes.
Tire maker Cooper Tire & Rubber rose 41% after it agreed to be bought by Indian tire maker Apollo Tyres in a deal that values its stock at $2.2 billion.
Write to Alexandra Scaggs at alexandra.scaggs@dowjones.com

CoreLogic: Homes underwater increase in Chicago area


Rising home prices have enabled more homeowners to regain equity in their homes, but the good news doesn't extend to the Chicago area.

Some 34.2 percent of homes with a mortgage in the Chicago, equaling almost 519,000 properties, were underwater at the end of March, meaning more is owed on the mortgage than the value of the property, CoreLogic said Wednesday. That compares with more than 511,000  underwater properties, or 33.7 percent of homes with a mortgage, at the end of December.

Nationally, 850,000 homes moved back into a positive equity position during the year's first quarter, which brought the number of homeowners who have regained equity in the past year to 1.7 million. Almost 20 percent of homes with a mortgage were underwater at the end of the first quarter, down from 21.7 percent at the end of 2012.

"The impressive home gains of 2012 and the beginning of 2013 have had a big impact on the distribution of residential home equity," said Mark Fleming, CoreLogic  chief economist, said in a statement. "We expect the pent-up supply that falling negative equity releases will moderate price gains in many of the fast-appreciating markets this spring."

NEWS SOURCE: http://www.chicagotribune.com