LONDON |
(Reuters) - The
yen rose while shares, bonds and gold fell on Tuesday as investors retreated
into cash, unnerved by fears that major central banks are cooling in their
commitment to the money-pumping that has buoyed global markets.
The selloff was
triggered in Tokyo when the Bank of Japan
left its policy unchanged, refraining from any fresh measures to tackle rising
government bond yields that threaten to thwart its $1.4 trillion stimulus
program.
Traders also noted
nervousness about a German Constitutional Court hearing on the legality of the
European Central Bank's bond-buying scheme, which added to long-running fears
over the U.S. Federal Reserve winding down its stimulus plan.
By the end of the
European morning session, the broad FTSEurofirst 300 index .FTEU3 had lost 1.5 percent to be at a six week low. The
dollar had sunk as much as two percent against the yen to be near 98.50 yen,
and German 10-year bond yields had risen 4 basis points to 1.59 percent.
Gold was down 1
percent, close to a three-week low at $1,371.11 an ounce, while U.S. stock
index futures pointed to further weakness ahead
for Wall Street. .N
The selloff
encompassed traditional safe havens and riskier asset classes. "This is by
no means an indication the markets are entering a new downturn," said
Viktor Nossek, head of research at Boost ETP, an exchange traded products
provider.
"This is
seasonal and sentiment driven. We're entering summer and markets have seen good
year-to-date gains, so people are taking this opportunity to sell," he
said.
BOJ SPARK
However, the
selling was led by a sharp fall in the dollar which followed the BOJ's decision
to refrain from taking additional measures to curb recent bond market
volatility at its regular monthly policy meeting.
BOJ Governor
Haruhiko Kuroda did subsequently try to reassure the markets the central bank
would consider fresh steps if yields spike again in the future, but the
decision rattled many foreign investors.
"There were
some expectations that the BOJ would curb bond market volatility and that has
not happened," said Chris Walker, currency strategist at Barclays.
In the selloff
that followed, the euro lost over 1 percent against the resurgent Japanese
currency to be at 128.70 yen. But it firmed against the weaker dollar to be
just under $1.33 and near a 3-month high.
Japan's Nikkei
index closed down 1.5 percent .N225, though this followed Monday's 4.9 percent gain, while
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS
tumbled 1.1 percent to hit a 6-1/2-month lows.
The selling
spread across emerging shares as well, sending MSCI's benchmark index .MSCIEF
to a nine-month low and extending losses caused by political tensions in Turkey
and worries about China's slowing economy.
MSCI's world
equity index .MIWD00000PUS, which tracks shares in 45 countries, shed 0.4
percent to end three days of gains.
DEBT NERVES
Debt investors
pulled out of some of the riskiest assets in the euro area with Greek 10-year
bond yields suffering their worst daily loss over a year, rising a full point
to stand at 10.66 percent.
The Greek
government's failure to find buyers for the state-owned natural gas company,
threatening a bailout goal of privatization, piled on the pressure.
Safe haven debt
also took a hit with U.S. Treasury yields touching their highest levels in more
than a year. The benchmark 10-year note rose 4.5 basis points to 2.26 percent.
The concerns over China
weighed on commodity markets and Brent crude dropped $1.35 at $102.60 a barrel,
while copper traded near a one-month low at $7,082 a tonne.
(Editing by Ruth
Pitchford)
Referensi : http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/11/us-markets-global-idUSBRE88901C20130611
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