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Thursday, April 30, 2015

Asian stocks slip, euro stands tall after weak U.S. GDP

By Shinichi SaoshiroTOKYO (Reuters) - Asian stocks slipped and the euro stood tall against the dollar early on Thursday after U.S. data overnight showed the economy grew much more slowly than expected in the first quarter.MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.5 percent. Japan's Nikkei shed 1.6 percent and South Korean and Australian shares also suffered losses.The U.S. economy grew just 0.2 percent in the first quarter, down sharply from the previous quarter's 2.2 percent growth. The disappointing data further dimmed already faint prospects for an interest rate hike in June by the Federal Reserve.The euro was steady at $1.1118 after surging to a near two-month high of $1.1188 in wake of the data. A rise in euro zone debt yields also helped the euro. German Bund yields posted their biggest daily rise in two years overnight on waning deflation fears and improved prospects for a Greek debt deal.The common currency shed some of its gains after investors focused on the Fed's monetary policy statement attributing the winter slowdown in U.S. economic growth partly to transitory factors.The Fed, however, took a dimmer view of the labor market after its two-day policy meeting ended late Wednesday."All in all, the FOMC statement gave a balanced assessment of the current economic slowdown and the Committee remains very much in a data-dependent mode. However, the balanced and cautious tone in the statement is a far cry from the optimism and (over)confidence that we have seen in previous statements," economists at Rabobank wrote in a note to clients.The dollar was down 0.1 percent at 118.945 yen after a choppy session overnight which took it between a low of 118.60 and a high of 119.36.A rise in yields on U.S. Treasuries, which saw the benchmark 10-year note's yield climb to a six-week high overnight amid a global bond sell-off, helped shore up the dollar.The Australian dollar was little changed at $0.8001 after marching to a three-month peak of $0.8077 overnight on the dollar's broad weakness.Another factor aiding commodity currencies such as the Aussie was the recent surge in oil prices. U.S. crude was down 0.3 percent at $58.43 a barrel after jumping to a four-month high of $59.33 overnight when the first crude stock draw in five months at the Cushing, Oklahoma, hub suggested the oil glut may be starting to wane(Editing by Eric Meijer)Join the conversation about this story »


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