GLOBAL MARKETS-Euro edges higher, stocks sag before ECB meeting

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 06 November 2014 | 18.12

Thu Nov 6, 2014 4:46am EST

  * Euro nudges up, eyes ECB meeting after report of internal  rift      * European stocks drop 0.4 percent after recent big gains      * Dollar rally eases, commodities remain under pressure      * EM, commodity-linked currencies strained        By Marc Jones      LONDON, Nov 6 (Reuters) - The euro edged higher and European  stocks pulled back on Thursday as investors waited to see what  message ECB chief Mario Draghi will send after the European  Central Bank's monthly meeting, following another run of poor  euro zone data.      Markets were also watching for signs Draghi may temper his  readiness for more aggressive stimulus given reports of internal  opposition to his leadership style and long-standing unease  about quantitative easing.       Having jumped 1.7 percent on Wednesday and over 10 percent  over the last two weeks, European shares opened down  0.4 percent as a mixed batch of company earnings gave investors  an additional spur to cash in some of their recent gains.       In the currency market, the euro also nudged back above  $1.25 as a recent sharp rally in the dollar, particularly  against the yen, came to a halt after volatile moves overnight.      But with markets having picked themselves up again after  last month's beating, and political hurdles like the U.S.  mid-term elections out of the way, there was a general feeling  that the upward trend in stocks and the dollar would continue.      "The market feels great," said Nick Lawson Managing Director  in Global Markets Equity at Deutsche Bank.       "It is a very risk-on mindset set at the moment and if you  do get a much more inclusive tone from the ECB and some  information on what assets could be bought, we could be off to  the races."      Disappointing euro zone business surveys, a big cut in  European Commission growth forecasts and the Bank of Japan's  surprise decision last week to enhance its already massive  monetary stimulus have raised pressure on the ECB to ease more.      The euro last traded at $1.2515, flirting once again  with a two-year low of $1.2439 set early in the week, while  demand for euro zone government bonds from Germany to Greece  gradually picked up as trading gathered momentum.                    COMMODITY ROUT      In Asian trading, the region's shares and commodity  currencies had stumbled as the ongoing rout in oil, copper,  gold, silver and other key commodities trumped cautious optimism  about a strengthening U.S. economy.      MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   fell as much as 0.5 percent before largely  recovering, led by declines in Australia and China.      The Australian dollar, often used a liquid proxy for China,  to which it is heavily exposed, flirted with Wednesday's  four-year low of $0.8606 while the Canadian dollar  stood near five-year lows of C$1.1466 to the U.S. dollar  .        Many other commodity exporters took an even bigger  hammering.      The Brazilian real remained within touching distance of a  six-year trough hit last week and Russia's rouble   tumbled to another record low a day after the  central bank effectively abandoned daily inventions.      Reflecting the selloff, the MSCI's emerging market index   is now at its cheapest level since 2005 in comparison  to the U.S. S&P 500. Almost 30 percent of emerging markets are  oil exporters and many others depend on mining or other  commodities.      "While I would put about a 70 percent chance that the global  economy will chug along, the fact that two of the BRICs bloc are  facing problems does raise some caution," said Soichiro Monji,  chief strategist at Daiwa SB Investments.           Japan's Nikkei ended down 0.9 percent as speculators  booked profits from their 8-plus percent rise over the past  three days, fuelled by the BOJ's extra monetary stimulus.      That triggered a knee-jerk buyback in the yen, with the  dollar falling to 114.55 yen after having hit a seven-year peak  of 115.52 yen.      Still generally solid U.S. economic data and expectations of  business-friendly policies following the Republican Party's  election victory underpinned the dollar and saw record closing  highs on Wednesday for the Dow and the S&P 500.       Payroll processor AD reported solid U.S. private-sector job  growth in October, auguring well for jobs data due on Friday.      The strong dollar continued to weigh on commodities and  metals though, sending the price of gold and silver   to 4-1/2-year lows after big falls on Wednesday.       Copper, a barometer of global demand, eased 0.3  percent to $6,618.25 per tonne, while Brent oil, which has  slumped 30 percent since June, remained near a four-year low at  82.70 a barrel.         (Additional reporting by Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo; Editing by  Catherine Evans)  
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