GLOBAL MARKETS-Stress tests, Ebola cool stocks after best week of year

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 24 Oktober 2014 | 18.12

Fri Oct 24, 2014 5:16am EDT

  * Stocks dip but head for best week of the year      * Risk sentiment hit by first Ebola case in NY      * U.S. and euro zone economic data positive      * Oil on track for first weekly gain in five weeks        By Marc Jones      LONDON, Oct 24 (Reuters) - World stocks dipped on Friday, as  European bank stress test results due at the weekend and New  York City's first case of Ebola prompted investors to lock in  profits after the best week for shares in well over a year.      A doctor who treated Ebola patients in West Africa became  the first person to test positive for the virus in America's  largest city, raising fresh fears about its spread.          Europe's main bourses in London, Frankfurt   and Paris all opened 0.5 percent in the red and U.S.  stock futures were down as investors moved to safe-haven  assets such as the yen and U.S. and European government bonds.      "It's down to a combination of profit taking and a bit of  uncertainty about the weekend's stress test results," said David  Madden, a market analyst at IG index.          "We have already seen a spike up in Greek government bond  yields recently so the euro zone crisis has not gone away, and  after this week we are back on a 9,000 level for the DAX so  people are happy to take a bit of money off the table."       The euro also slipped on caution about the banking  tests. It hit $1.2638, having fallen for much of the week after  European Central Bank insiders told Reuters the ECB was drawing  up plans for a corporate bond purchase programme.          Follow an intense, year-long review, the euro zone's 130  biggest banks received the ECB's final verdict on their finances  on Thursday, with official results to be published on Sunday.         Juergen Fitschen, co-chief executive of Deutsche Bank and  president of the BdB association of German banks, offered a hint  on Thursday, saying the results probably gave his country's  banks a clean bill of health. Ireland's permanent tsb is  so far the only failure that has been exposed.                   BEST WEEK OF YEAR      The Ebola fears saw S&P 500 mini futures fall as much  as 0.7 percent, slipping from two-week highs hit on Thursday on  budding optimism from corporate earnings and the global economy.      With 177 of the S&P 500 companies having posted  third-quarter results, 69.5 percent have beaten expectations,  better than the 67 percent beat rate over the past four  quarters, and higher than the 20-year average of 63 percent,  Thomson Reuters data showed.      MSCI's All-World index which spans bourses in 45 countries,  is up over 2.6 percent for the week, its strongest performance  since July last year. Gains in Europe were slightly  less but still the best this year.      There was also focus on Russia and Ukraine, with Russia  facing a rating review from Standard & Poor's later and  elections taking place in Ukraine on Sunday.      The rouble was at a new record low and stocks were in the  red ahead of the S&P review, which could Russia's credit rating  cut to 'junk'. Moscow will be hoping its solid finances prevent  a second downgrade from a major rating agency in as many weeks.      "I would assume that it is too early to revisit the ratings.  But this is my personal opinion. The rating agencies work  according to their methodologies," influential former Russian  finance minister and outspoken policy critic, Alexei Kudrin,  told Reuters at an event in London this week.      Meanwhile more political stability in Ukraine could aid the  European economy, which has suffered from the fall in trade with  Russia on tit-for-tat sanctions between the West and Moscow.      "I suspect one often overlooked reason for the market's  rebound since the middle of this week was signs of easing  tensions between Russia and Ukraine," said Soichiro Monji, chief  strategist at Daiwa SB Investments.      President Petro Poroshenko's bloc holds a big lead ahead of  Sunday's poll in Ukraine, but populist Oleh Lyashko's Radical  party could also make a strong showing.       If so, Poroshenko may have the awkward task of seeking  support from a politician who has been sharply critical of his  peace plan and contacts with Russian President Vladimir Putin.         An election that pro-Russian separatists will hold early  next month must also be navigated.      Commodities have also enjoyed a small rebound this week  following a wretched recent run on fears about slowing global  growth and oversupply in individual markets.      Brent oil was slightly softer at $86 a barrel on Friday as  risk appetite took a hit from the news of Ebola in New York but  it was set for its first gain in five weeks. Copper was heading  for only its second rise in nine weeks.      Oil markets had risen sharply on news that crude supplies to  the market from Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter, fell  to 9.36 million barrels per day (bpd) in September, down 328,000  bpd from August, according to an industry source.        (Editing by Catherine Evans)  
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