Markets |
Equities gain, euro slumps as ECB eyes faster bond buys
DJ: 18,312.39 +13.51 NAS: 5,070.03
-8.41 S&P: 2,127.83
-1.37
(Reuters) U.S. and
European equities rose to trade near record highs on Tuesday, and the euro
tumbled on signals the European Central Bank may accelerate its 1 trillion euro
bond-buying program over the next two months.
The dollar gained 1.5
percent against the euro and was broadly ahead for a second day, while
U.S. Treasuries prices fell after data showed that U.S. housing starts in April rose to the highest
in nearly 7-1/2 years.
Oil prices slumped more
than 3 percent, partly because of the dollar rally.
Wall Street's Dow Industrials index closed at an all-time high,
though other major U.S. stock indexes mostly eased in choppy trading, unsettled
by disappointing Wal-Mart results and fears the housing data might encourage
Federal Reserve policymakers to move sooner on interest-rate hikes.
"There
really is a lot of fear about the threat of higher interest rates,"
said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management in
Tulsa, Oklahoma. "It's not an 'if' story. It's a 'when' story."
Wal-Mart's (WMT.N)
shares ended down 4.4 percent at $76.43. The retailer was the biggest drag on
the Dow and the S&P 500 after reporting slower-than-expected U.S.
same-store sales growth.
The Dow Jones industrial
average .DJI rose 13.51 points, or 0.07 percent, to
end at a record 18,312.39. The S&P
hit a record intraday high of 2,133.02 before ending down 1.37 points, or 0.06
percent, at 2,127.83. The Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 8.41 points, or 0.17 percent,
to 5,070.03.
European markets shot
up to near multi-year highs after senior ECB policymaker Benoit Coeure talked
of adjusting the bank's bond-buying program.
He said the speed of the recent spike in bond yields was
worrisome. It has effectively wiped out the benefits of quantitative easing, he
said, and the ECB could "moderately" increase its buying in May and
June, and possibly in September.
His comments pushed the euro back below $1.12 for the first time
in a week. The FTS Eurofirst 300 .FTSE ended up 1.7 percent. Gains of more than 2
percent on Germany's DAX .GDAXI and the CAC 40 in Paris .FCHI outpaced a 0.38 percent rise on London's
FTSE.FTSE.
European bond yields tumbled, with benchmark 10-year German
Bunds down 4 basis points at 0.61 percent after going as low as 0.55 percent.
The dollar index .DXY was
last up 1.15 percent, getting a lift against other major currencies from the U.S. housing
data. The euro last traded off 1.5 percent at $1.1147.
Treasuries were also hurt by large offerings of corporate bonds,
with yields on the 10-year note last at 2.2797 percent on a price decline of
14/32.
Oil prices fell more than 3 percent, with U.S. crude off for a fifth straight day, on the
dollar's rally, as well as on evidence the United States and top oil exporter Saudi Arabia were pumping more than the world
needed.
Brent LCOc1 fell $2.25 to $64.02 a barrel while U.S. crude's
front-month contract CLc1 settled down $2.17 at $57.26.
Blogger’s note: No volume data published today.
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