Friday, 22 July 2011

Global markets bouncing on the truce of Libya, the G7 intervention

Mask wearing people watch a screen displaying shares in Tokyo, which rose after that the G7 intervened to sell the yen. Photo: REUTERS

The FTSE 100 has finished the day up 0. set to 5718.13, but dropped 1. 9pc during the week. Germany the DAX edged up to 0 1pc and France CAC rose 0 FP6 with the falling yen as central banks sold the Japanese currency in the co-ordinated G7 first since 2000.


In New York, the Dow Jones rose 0 9pc closed trade in Europe and the price of oil has a strong. Brent crude, which rose above $117 per barrel earlier in the day after the United Nations, supported military action in Libya, withdraw below $114 as the Government announced an immediate halt to military operations in the country.


The United Nations Security Council adopted a resolution late Thursday approving "all necessary measures" to impose a no-fly in Libya area, protect civilian areas and pressure leader Libyan, Colonel Gaddafi to accept a cease-fire. He said he was looking to verify compliance with the resolution.


The market is "dance with the geopolitical developments which, for the moment, is sounding better than what they have in the last week," said Patrick O'Hare to Briefing.com.


The Nikkei 225, which dropped to 10 2pc this week after tumbling 16pc, in the first two days taking the comfort of the coordinated action by the G7 to big 2 FP7 countries. The increase was mirrored across stock markets in Asia.


Yoshihiko Noda, Japanese Finance Minister, said that the country had agreed with the central banks of United States, Britain and the Canada and the European Central Bank to intervene jointly in the foreign exchange market.


The Japanese currency weakened against the dollar to about 81.20 yen, that extends from a rebound to a record low of 76.25 yen struck on Thursday.


The France and the Bank of England Bank confirmed that they had sold yen Friday. The Bundesbank said they would participate but did not say if they had acted.


Some traders remain skeptical about the impact of the intervention. Speculators, such as hedge funds were keen to test the authorities resolve by buying in the rise in the yen sell-off, with the market still anticipate repatriation flows to the Japan after week last earthquake and subsequent nuclear crisis in support of the Japanese currency.


Mr. Noda told reporters that the size of the intervention will be revealed in two months. Analysts estimated that intervention could be as high as 750bn yen. Market Tokyo estimates prior to the Bank of the intervention Japan to 2 billion yen (£ 16bn) in the day, similar to its end of a day of intervention in September.


"Intervention must be concerted and aggressive... and even then, I am skeptical, said one trader in London."


The intervention surprised - most financial markets had anticipated to the Japan to act alone - underlines the threat that nations see now of Japan, of the world's third largest economy.


"They felt the need to do something together," said Masafumi Yamamoto, an analyst with Barclays Capital in Tokyo currency. "The disaster itself clearly had a very negative impact on the economy, but the movement of the yen has do worse."


The strength of the yen since the earthquake struck a week ago seems counter-intuitive, but Mr. Yamamoto of Barclays said that the Japanese currency has historically served as a haven for investors during a crisiseven one of the country.


He added that some speculators have been buying yen in the hope that Japanese insurance companies would have to liquidate foreign investment in order to yen home to help pay for the repair of the country.


To calm investors, insurance companies and most important of Japan, which are the major owners of America's debt, published yesterday strong denials that they were preparing a predatory pricing of US Treasury obligations.


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