About Us  |   Advertise  |   Contact Us  |   Terms & Conditions  |   RSS Feeds
 
Support our sponsors:
sharemarket
NZX 50 Index 4611.96 2.40
S&P/ASX 200 5191.20 0.00
Dow Jones Industrials 14839.80 21.00

While you were sleeping: Focus on Spanish relief

Thursday 7th June 2012

Text too small?

Equities advanced amid expectations that policymakers are gearing up to bail out Spain in an effort to help curtail the impact of Europe's debt crisis on the pace of global growth.

In late afternoon trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 1.83 percent, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 1.65 percent and the Nasdaq Composite Index gained 1.84 percent.

Underpinning the positive sentiment was the Federal Reserve's assessment of the world's largest economy, pointing to a moderate pace of growth.

"Reports from the twelve Federal Reserve Districts suggest overall economic activity expanded at a moderate pace during the reporting period from early April to late May," the Fed said in its latest Beige Book survey of business conditions. "Economic outlooks remain positive, but contacts were slightly more guarded in their optimism."

That's an improvement from the April survey in which the Fed said the US economy had grown at a "modest to moderate" pace.

In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index advanced 2.3 percent, it largest one-day jump in six months.

While the European Central Bank left its key interest rate unchanged at 1 percent, ECB President Mario Draghi said policy makers had discussed a reduction in borrowing costs, bolstering speculation that might happen soon to help bolster sagging growth and confidence in the euro zone as Spain appears to be pushed into the footsteps of Ireland, Portugal and Greece.

"Draghi left the door wide open for a rate cut," Tobias Blattner, an economist at Daiwa Capital Markets Europe in London, told Bloomberg News. "But policy makers wanted to keep their powder dry until after the Greek elections and the independent assessment of the Spanish banking sector."

The IMF report on Spain is due early next week. The Greek elections are set for June 17.

Indeed, Draghi highlighted the central bank is on alert amid "increased downside risks to the economic outlook".

"We monitor all developments closely and we stand ready to act," he said.
European sources told Reuters that Germany and European Union officials sought solutions for Spain's weakened banks, although Madrid has not yet requested assistance and is resisting political conditions.

Spain will seek to sell 2 billion euros of bonds on Thursday, providing a fresh check on the country's access to financial markets.

In the US, shareholders of Tempur-Pedic International are unlikely to get a good night's sleep after shares of the mattress maker sank 41 percent on its revised full-year forecast. Shares of its rivals fell too, with Select Comfort dropping 18 percent and Mattress Firm sagging 20 percent, according to Reuters.

In the continuing saga known as the Facebook IPO, Nasdaq has agreed to pay US$40 million in cash and trading rebates to compensate clients for the problematic debut of the social network company's shares. The offer falls far short of what brokers have claimed.

BusinessDesk.co.nz



Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.
Bookmark and Share   Printable version
Related News

NZ Sugar Company boosts profits on higher exports and lower costs from Chelsea factory
Greymouth Petroleum shucks off disaffected shareholder
Lance Wiggs's Punakaiki Fund mulls $50 million IPO to invest in high-growth companies
Ecoya ekes out small annual profit, EBITDA up 26%
Snakk raises $6.5M in over-subscribed issue
NZ trade surplus misses expectations
SFO charges seven people over mortgage fraud
While you were sleeping Cautious calm returns
NZ meat cleared to move from across Chinese wharves
NZ dollar falls to 8-month low

 
Previous News
News Alerts
Breaking News 
After the Bell (daily) 

Unsubscribe/Update »

RSS feeds »
Twitter »
Facebook »

Stock Quote

Exchange: Stock Code:

Don't know the stock code? Search by keyword:

Today's Market Numbers
NZX 50 Index 4611.96 2.40
S&P/ASX 200 5191.20 0.00
Dow Jones Industrials 14839.80 21.00
Most Commented On
  forex centre
cfd centre
options centre
NZX 15 Index

© Copyright 2013 Investment Research Group Ltd. All Rights Reserved.