Market Updates
Strong Yen Pressures Stock Futures
Elena
05 Mar, 2007
New York City
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U.S. stock futures pointed Monday to a lower opening for another straight session, with the yen posting strength and thus hurting hedge funds. Worries over the health of the U.S. second-biggest subprime lender, New Century Financial, also generated negative sentiment. Company''s stiock tumbled 57% in the pre-open after it said it is a target of a federal criminal probe and is likely to breach a major lending covenant with its financial backers.
[R]9:15AM Strong yen and heavy losses for New Century Financial weighed on pre-market sentiment.[/R]
U.S. stock futures pointed Monday to a lower opening for another straight session, with the yen posting strength and thus hurting hedge funds. Worries over the health of the U.S. second-biggest subprime lender, New Century Financial ((NEW)), also generated negative sentiment. Company's stiock tumbled 57% in the pre-open after it said it is a target of a federal criminal probe and is likely to breach a major lending covenant with its financial backers. In corporate news, Research in Motion ((RIMM))said its chairman and co-CEO is stepping aside as the BlackBerry maker plans to restate results, cutting earnings by up to $250 million dating to fiscal 2004 because of incorrect dates over stock option grants. S&P 500 futures dropped 10.5 points at 1,375.30 and Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 16.75 points at 1,709.50. Dow industrial futures dropped 90 points.
[R]9:00AM Asian markets ended sharply lower Monday with Japan leading decliners.[/R]
Asian markets finished lower on Monday. Japanese Nikkei 225 Index fell 3.34% to 16,642.25. Exporters fell amid a surge in the yen, which erodes overseas earnings when repatriated to Japan. The dollar fell to 115.70 yen from 116.75 yen late Friday in New York. Canon shed 2.08%, Toyota Motor fell 3.24% and Sony was down 2.92%.
Hong Kong declined 4% to 18,664.88. Investors are worried about the possibility of further falls to come. Shares of HSBC fell 2.5% ahead of its earnings results, which the company issued after the market closed. Among other large-caps, China Mobile dropped 6%, Hutchison Whampoa fell 3% and China Construction Bank sank 4.9%. The Shanghai Composite Index fell 1.6% at 2,783.31.
In South Korea shares also shed 2.71% to 1,376.15. Australian index S&P/ASX 200 index fell 2.3% on heavy volume to close at a seven-week low of 5,642.40. The index is down 6.6% from the last month record high of 6,052.1. BHP Billiton led the decliners, with commodity-price weakness giving an added reason to sell resources. BHP shed 2.9%, Rio Tinto lost 2.5% and Woodside Petroleum closed down 4.2%.
Other major markets also declined. Singapore Straits Times Index finished 3.1% lower, at 2,982.29, the Weighted Price Index of the Taiwan Stock Exchange closed 3.7% lower to 7,344.56 and the Kuala Lumpur Composite Index, ended down 4.6%, at 1,110.69.
[R]7:00AM European markets declined Monday on global market weakness.[/R]
European markets were sharply lower on Monday. The German DAX Xetra 30 dropped 2% to 6,472.81, the French CAC 40 fell 1.8% to 5,328.70 and the U.K. FTSE 100 lost 1.4% to 6,031.40.
Advancers
One of the few advancers was HSBC Holdings edging 0.2% higher after reporting a 5% profit rise in 2006 and lifting its dividend by 11%. It took $10.57 billion in charges, mostly on a poor performance out of the U.S.
Countrywide gained 3.5% after Apollo Management late Friday agreed to buy the real estate chain shares for 1 billion pounds. Getaz Romang shares rose 21% after Ireland CRH agreed to buy it for $442 million.
Decliners
Fears that sharp strengthening for the Swiss franc could hurt exports drove Swatch 3.9% lower. Richemont, which owns the Cartier brand, announced a joint venture to design, manufacture and distribute watches under the Ralph Lauren brand. The venture, which aims to launch products in Autumn 2008, will operate at a loss for a few years. Richemont shares fell 2.6%.
Mining and metals stocks were lower as commodity prices fell. Xstrata, the London-listed miner, was down 4%, while steelmaker Arcelor-Mittal shed 4.1%.
Oil and gold
Gold fell to a five-week low on selling by investors holding the precious metal in exchange-traded funds after a slump in Asian and European stocks. Gold for immediate delivery dropped $5.70, or 0.9%, to $636.75 an ounce in early trade in London.
Crude oil fell for a second day on concern global economic growth will slow, reducing fuel consumption. Crude oil for April delivery fell as much as $1.18, or 1.9%, to $60.46 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude dropped as much as $1.29, or 2.1%, to $60.79 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in early trade in London.
Currencies
The euro dropped against the dollar on Monday, while the U.S. currency hit a three-month low against the Japanese yen as global stock markets remained nervous following last week sell-off. In morning European trading the euro bought $1.3129, down from $1.3191 late Friday in New York. The British pound fell to $1.9225 from $1.9433 in New York, while the dollar slipped to purchase 115.36 Japanese yen, down from 116.75 on Friday.
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