Thu Jun 25,
2015 7:32am EDT Related: GREECE
LONDON | BY MARIUS ZAHARIA
Reuters
Persistent
concerns of Greece leaving
the euro weighed on European stocks on Thursday, with the lack of progress in
negotiations on a cash-for-reform deal for Athens pushing investors towards safe-haven
German Bunds.
The talks
stumbled on Wednesday, with euro zone finance ministers accusing Greece of
refusing to compromise ahead of a deadline next week when an International
Monetary Fund loan tranche of 1.6 billion euros comes due.
Greek
officials say without a deal the country does not have the money to pay the
IMF. A default may trigger a bank run and may push the country out of the euro.
European
Union leaders are set to meet again on Thursday.
The
pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index was down 0.5 percent at 1,569.82 points
after closing 0.4 percent lower in the previous session. Yields on top-rated
German 10-year Bunds, which set the standard for euro zone borrowing costs,
fell 1 basis point to 0.83 percent.
"Today
is another day that will be all about Greece ," said Anders Svendsen,
chief analyst at Nordea. "The Greek deadline is approaching with no
agreement on the table, which is pushing investors towards safety."
Yields on Europe's
lower-rated bonds in Spain , Italy and Portugal rose 2-3 basis points. The
three countries are seen as the most vulnerable to contagion from Greece .
The Greek
crisis had a global impact. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares
outside Japan
was down about 0.44 percent. Japan 's
Nikkei stock index ended down about 0.5 percent after hitting its highest level
since 1996 on Wednesday on hopes for a Greek deal.
"Optimism
around a Greek deal had been driving price action all week but a stall in the negotiation
process has put the brakes on the rally," IG market strategist Stan Shamu
wrote in a note.
Hennes
& Mauritz fell 2.2 percent after the world's second-biggest fashion
retailer reported a fiscal second-quarter pretax profit roughly in line with expectations
and said a stronger dollar would result in gradually increased purchasing
costs.
EURO
HOLDING UP
The dollar
index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major rivals, was
slightly lower on the day at 95.192.
The euro
was up slightly at $1.1215, showing less responsiveness to the Greek crisis
than the bond and stock markets. Some strategists say the market has been using
the euro as a funding currency for carry trades, in which investors borrow
euros and sell them to buy higher-yielding currencies.
"What
has been fairly clear is that every time there's a chance of a deal the euro
plummets, and every time there's disappointment coming along, it reverses
course," said Neil Mellor, FX strategist at Bank of New York Mellon in London .
"The
only interpretation you can place on that is that the market is looking to use
the euro as a funding currency in a carry trade ... The prerequisite of a carry
trade is relative stability, so if a Greek deal is on, you sell the euro."
In
commodities trading, U.S. crude was steady at $60.24 a barrel after plunging
more than 1 percent on Wednesday on a government report showing that an eighth
straight weekly drop in U.S. crude stockpiles was offset by a large build in
refined products. Brent crude added about 0.1 percent to $63.61.
Spot gold
edged up to $1,176.80 an ounce after sliding for the past four sessions to a
two-week low.
(Additional
reporting by Jemima Kelly in London and Lisa
Twaronite in Tokyo ;
Editing by Dominic Evans)
No comments:
Post a Comment