Search

Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Asian markets tumble over EU debt crisis


Asian shares have sharply tumbled following reports of a gloomy US employment situation as well as concerns over the possibility of a eurozone breakup.
Japan’s market lost over two percent on Monday morning, reaching a level not seen since late 1983, while Hong Kong plummeted over 2.3 percent. 
Shanghai was 1.24 percent lower, Sydney skidded 1.84 percent and Seoul lost 2.60 percent. 
The falls come as Washington has put the number of jobs created in May at 69,000 - the slowest rise in 12 months. Meanwhile, leaders across the eurozone are facing a political and economic challenge in Greece. 
New data released late last week showed more signs that growth is slowing in both China and India, which have until now been relatively bright spots for the global economy. 
On top of the alarming jobs outlook in the United States, investors are deeply worried about the eurozone debt crisis. Unemployment in the eurozone has hit a record high of 11 percent. 
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 2.22 percent on Friday, wiping out its gains for the year, and the main index of the German stock market closed down 3.4 percent. 
Greece's political and economic turmoil led to mounting concerns among eurozone members that Athens would not comply with the austerity measures it agreed to with its European neighbors in exchange for the endorsement of the second financial bailout, and would finally leave the 17-nation bloc. 
The head of the European Central Bank earlier this week told European Union leaders that the single currency union is unsustainable in its current form. 

Gold pauses after rally triggered by weak US data


Gold pauses after rally triggered by weak US data
Singapore, June 4, Gold edged lower on Monday after posting its biggest rally in more than three years in the previous session.
The surprisingly weak US employment data added to the gloom over the global economy, just as the euro zone appears to be sinking deeper into the debt crisis and China's growth slows, Reuters reported.
Gold broke ranks with riskier assets on Friday and rose 4 percent, propped up by rekindled expectations of further monetary easing by the US Federal Reserve.
Asian investors, however, were less than convinced that the Fed would implement monetary easing soon, and were selling at the higher prices to lock in profits.
"People are still not sure where things may go and have been selling after prices jumped," said a Singapore-based dealer.
Spot gold edged down 0.3 percent to $1,621.40 an ounce by 23:21 EDT (0321 GMT). It had fallen to as low as $1,614.59 earlier in the session.
US gold futures contract for August delivery was little changed at $1,623.
The London financial markets are closed on Monday and Tuesday for a public holiday.
Bullion fell more than 6 percent in May, under the weight of a dollar that rallied more than 5 percent as investors piled into the greenback, US Treasuries and German Bund during a deepening euro zone crisis.
But if the US recovery falters as well, gold will have a chance to shine once again as a safe haven as investors look for alternatives.
Spot silver lost 0.8 percent to $28.41, after rallying 3.6 percent on Friday - its biggest one-day rise in more than three months.

Also it is recommended to see:

Asian markets tumble over EU debt crisis

S&P warning on eurozone about Greece

The Greek stock market has plummeted 5.9 percent after Standard & Poor's credit rating agency warned that the country has a one-in-three chance of leaving the eurozone.
The main ATHEX (Athens Stock Exchange) index fell by 6.1 percent to 471.35 points just an hour before the official close time at 5:20 pm (1420 GMT) on Tuesday. 
This comes after Standard & Poor's issued a statement on Monday warning of “at least a one-in-three chance” that the country will leave the eurozone after the June 17 elections. 
Greece’s likely rejection of the austerity measures and reforms in return for EU-IMF bailouts, following the mid-June parliamentary elections, would lead to the “suspension of external financial support,” said the international agency. 
It added that Greece’s proposed circumstances would seriously damage its economy and most likely lead to another Greek sovereign default. 
However, the agency said the Greek exit from the eurozone would not affect other weaker eurozone states. 
Earlier this week, rating agency Moody's lowered Greece’s domestic rating ceiling due to escalating concerns over the debt-ridden country’s exit from the eurozone. 
Greece is the epicenter of the eurozone debt crisis. It is headed for the second parliamentary elections, expected on June 17, following a political impasse since the May 6 elections when no party gained enough seats in the elections. 
There are worries that more delays in resolving the eurozone debt crisis, which began in Greece in late 2009 and infected Italy, Spain and France last year, could push not only Europe but also much of the rest of the developed world back into recession.