por admin » Dom Feb 20, 2011 10:15 pm
El oro y el petroleo suben, las acciones bajan en el Asia mientras las tensiones aumentan en el Medio Oriente.
El crudo subio 1.9% en NY a $91.43 el barriel a las 11:04 am hora de Tokyo, subiendo por cuarto dia consecutivo.
El oro subio 0.4% y la plata subio a su precio mas alto en 30 anios.El MSCI Asia Pacific Index cayo 0.2% a 139.53. Los futures del S&P 500 bajaron 0.3%. El dolar bajo cerca a su nivel mas bajo en una semana frente al euro.
Oil, Gold Gain, Asian Stocks Decline as Tensions Escalate in Middle East
By Shiyin Chen - Feb 20, 2011 9:05 PM ET
Crude for April delivery jumped 1.9 percent in New York to $91.43 a barrel as of 11:04 a.m. in Tokyo, gaining for a fourth day. Photographer: Phil Weymouth/Bloomberg
Audio Download: WGC's Grubb Says Gold ETP's Are 'Resilient', Feb. 18 Oil climbed and gold advanced to a seven-week high, while Asian stocks snapped a three-day rally amid escalating tensions in the Middle East.
Crude for April delivery jumped 1.9 percent in New York to $91.43 a barrel as of 11:04 a.m. in Tokyo, gaining for a fourth day. Gold increased 0.4 percent and silver rose to a 30-year high. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index slid 0.2 percent to 139.53. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures retreated 0.3 percent. U.S. financial markets are shut for a holiday. The dollar neared a one-week low against the euro.
Libyan security forces attacked anti-government protesters, drawing condemnation from the U.S. and Europe. In China, authorities acted to halt an online call for a “Jasmine Revolution,” the Associated Press and New York Times reported, while the central bank announced after the close of markets on Feb. 18 an increase in lenders’ reserve ratios. Economic reports this week may show U.S. home prices and housing sales dropped even as orders for long-lasting goods climbed.
“You’ve got to be very concerned, particularly because it can affect the oil price, and if you have the oil price spike up another $20, $30, you could reenter a global recession,” Bill Belchere, global chief economist at Mirae Asset Securities, said in a Bloomberg Television interview in Hong Kong.
The April contract for crude earlier gained as much as 2.2 percent to $91.70 in New York. The less actively traded March contract, which expires tomorrow, rose 1.3 percent to $87.30. Brent crude advanced 1.1 percent in London.
‘Market Balance’
“The tensions in the Middle East, particularly in Libya with the uprising against Qaddafi, is having an impact,” Ben Westmore, a minerals and energy economist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Melbourne, said by telephone today. “It’s not a Saudi Arabia or an Iran, but it would have an impact on the market balance if you were to see oil supply limited because of these conflicts.”
Amid the widening revolt in Libya, Africa’s biggest holder of crude oil reserves, leader Muammar Qaddafi’s son went on state television to warn that a civil war would risk the country’s oil wealth and invite a return of colonial powers.
Saif al-Islam Qaddafi, in a broadcast carried on U.S. cable networks, said the Libyan army made errors in handling anti- government protests and that almost 100 people had been killed, less than half the toll compiled by Human Rights Watch. He also said that some demonstrators had captured military equipment.
Gold for immediate delivery rallied to $1,391.65 an ounce, the highest level since Jan. 4. Silver climbed 0.7 percent to $32.8775 an ounce, the highest level in 30 years.
Stocks Fall
About three stocks fell for every two that gained on MSCI’s Asian index. The gauge rose 3 percent last week, its biggest weekly advance since the period ended Dec. 3. China’s Shanghai Composite Index fluctuated after the People’s Bank of China raised reserve ratios by half a percentage point.
BlueScope Steel Ltd., Australia’s largest steelmaker, dropped 4.2 percent after saying its first-half loss widened. MMC Corp., the Malaysian builder that’s jointly developing the Jazan Economic City project in Saudi Arabia, lost 4.1 percent. Losses were capped by a gain in commodity suppliers, with Inpex Corp., a Japanese oil explorer, rising 2 percent and Korea Zinc Co. rallying 1.9 percent.
Middle East stocks fell yesterday, with Dubai’s DFM General Index tumbling 3.7 percent. Libya became the latest focal point of demonstrations as uprising that toppled leaders in Tunisia and Egypt spread to Yemen, Djibouti and Bahrain.
U.S. futures indicate that stocks may fall when markets resume trading after the President’s Day break today. The S&P 500 rose 0.2 percent on Feb. 18, a third day of gains, amid higher-than-estimated corporate earnings.
Housing Market
The S&P/Case-Shiller index of home values in 20 U.S. cities fell 2.4 percent in December from a year ago, the biggest annual decrease in a year, according to a Bloomberg survey before tomorrow’s report. The National Association of Realtors will say on Feb. 23 that existing-home sales fell 1.5 percent to a 5.2 million annual pace, a separate Bloomberg survey showed.
The dollar traded at $1.3694 per euro from $1.3693 in New York on Feb. 18, after falling to $1.3716, the lowest level since Feb. 10. The greenback was at 83.16 yen from 83.18 yen last week.
South Korea’s won fell 0.3 percent to 1,115.15 per dollar, following its biggest weekly gain this year, on speculation China has less of an incentive to let the yuan appreciate faster now that a meeting of the Group of 20 nations has ended.
The yuan reached a 17-year high last week as finance ministers and central-bank heads from the G-20 met in Paris to discuss global imbalances. The group overcame Chinese opposition to start crafting an early warning system to detect when economic fault lines are opening that may imperil global growth. China diluted some of its language and secured the omission of foreign-exchange reserves.