GLOBAL MARKETS-Euro at 4-yr lows

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Euro at 4-yr lows; stocks drop on risk flight
* Weak US jobs data, Hungary debt spark fresh selling
* Euro drops to lowest in over 4 yrs as investors shun risk
* Asian stock markets slump over 3 percent, oil under $70
* U.S. dollar rallies, further pressuring commodities


The euro sank to four-year lows on Monday and stocks and commodities fell as increasing market volatility prompted investors to shed even more risky bets.
Disappointing U.S. jobs data on Friday and fears that euro zone debt problems were worsening spurred already nervous investors to face up to the risk the recovery of the world economy is faltering, although few see a recession as likely.
The sell-off looked set to persist in Europe, with financial spreadbetters expecting Britain's FTSE 100 , Germany's DAX and France's CAC-40 to open between 1.3-2.2 percent lower.
"There's a real sense of investors taking their money out of risky assets," said Nagayuki Yamagishi, a strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.
"The euro zone worries seem set to be with us for a while."
The euro , which has turned into the barometer for investor risk appetite in recent weeks after Greece's debt crisis, fell below $1.1900 to its lowest in more than four years at one point.
Comments from Hungary's government on Friday that it might suffer a Greece-style debt crisis continued to cast a pall over the market, giving investors a reason to sell the euro.
Analysts said the controversial remarks from Hungary were politically motivated and belied Hungary's economic fundamentals, which were far better than Greece's, but investors paid no heed.
Against the yen, the euro skidded below 108.33 yen to an eight-year trough.
A stronger yen punished Japanese stocks, with exporters particularly hard hit.
Japan's Nikkei index had its worst day in 14 months, falling 3.8 percent. The MSCI index for Asian stocks outside Japan also shed 3.8 percent.
S&P futures fell 0.8 percent, pointing to further losses in U.S. stocks later in the day, having already fallen on Friday to their lowest since February
The Australian dollar and the South Korean won, both of which are extremely vulnerable to turns in demand for risk, also suffered.
The Australian dollar struggled at $0.8136. The won fell to as far as a two-week low of 1,237.4/8.6 per dollar.
Assets with safe-haven appeal benefited from the scramble out of risk. Investors sought safety in the liquidity of U.S. Treasuries, with 10-year Treasury yields dropping to 13-month lows of 3.17 percent.

Demand for U.S. government debt fuelled demand for the U.S. dollar. The U.S. dollar index hit a 15-month high of 88.7.
A firmer U.S. dollar, together with the threat to the world economic recovery, pushed commodity prices lower.
Oil fell 1.6 percent to $70.36 a barrel by 0640 GMT, and Shanghai copper , zinc and aluminium futures sank across the board.


NO RESPITE YET FOR EURO
Friday's U.S. economic data had showed the recovery in the labour market was not as strong as hoped, with hiring by U.S. private employers slowing sharply in May.
Although some analysts said cautious hiring by U.S. firms did not herald another recession in the U.S. economy, the world's largest, stock investors paid no heed. Major U.S. stock indexes fell by up to 3.6 percent on Friday.
Some investors were particularly disappointed by the U.S. jobs data because they had counted on a strong showing to offset bad news around Europe's sovereign debt problems.
World leaders at a G20 meeting over the weekend appeared to acknowledge investor fears about Europe's debt woes by reaching an uneasy compromise on cuts in government budgets. But the outcome had little impact on markets on Monday, however.
The euro's drop on Monday was caused in part by some stop-loss selling around $1.1950. Traders said more aggressive stop-loss selling may be had if the euro falls under $1.1850.
After that, some analysts said the common currency could fall all the way to $1.15.
"There might be a bit of support around the $1.18 handle, but we expect it to fall to $1.15 eventually," Jonathan Cavenagh, a currency strategist at Westpac said of the struggling euro.
 

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Bernanke says Europe committed to euro's survival

Bernanke says Europe committed to euro's survival



European leaders are committed to ensuring the survival of the euro and have enough money to meet obligations of heavily indebted member countries, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Monday. In remarks to the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, Bernanke said a euro stabilization package of nearly USD 1 trillion was "a lot of money" and enough to protect Greece, Portugal and Spain from volatile credit markets for a number of years.
But he acknowledged that investors were not yet convinced Europe's debt problems would be resolved, and said more European rescue money may be needed.
European leadership is strongly committed to doing whatever is necessary to preserve the euro, preserve the euro zone, preserve the European project, and avoid financial problems that would certainly arise," Bernanke said. In a wide-ranging question-and-answer session, Bernanke said a regulatory reform bill which Congress is finalizing contained strong measures to address the problem of financial firms being "too big to fail."
"The acid test of the reform will be, will it control 'too big to fail?'" he said, pointing to measures including tougher bank capital rules, resolution authority to safely close failing firms, and "living wills" that require companies to plan for their own unwinding.
 

pps309

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ki haal aa veere.
long time no see, how r u?
main v fass gaya stocks ch, naa ta rakhe jaande aa na hi bechan di himmat hundi:p
 

Johal

ChArDi KaLaN
bas bai gg busy cc

ki hoya bai gg kehre lai hoi ne stocks indian market ch inverested ne ??
 
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