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Brent falls on Libya hopes, stocks cut gains

Aug 22 2011 18:39 Reuters

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New York - Brent crude oil fell on Monday as Libya’s civil war appeared to be nearing an end, while gold rallied to another record high as economic worries kept investors flocking to the commodity.

Stocks pared early gains and were near flat in midday US trading, with financials among the hardest hit. In the United States, shares of JPMorgan Chase, down 1.6%
were the top drag on the Dow industrials, followed by Bank of America, down 6.3%.

Persistent worries that the United States may be headed for another recession and that the sovereign debt crisis in eurozone peripheral countries may spread to the larger economies have kept investors on edge for weeks.

Banks are seen as most vulnerable to the crisis in Europe. An early bounce in US\ stocks following four weeks of losses tapered off toward noon.

“The ground zero of all worries is financials,” said Charlie Smith, chief investment officer at Pittsburgh-based Fort Pitt Capital Group.
Brent crude fell more than a dollar as investors anticipated the resumption of oil exports from OPEC-member Libya. US crude oil, however, rose.
“Brent is taking more of a battering but that’s only to be expected,” said Christopher Bellew, a trader at Jefferies Bache.
Brent crude was down $1.47 to $107.15.

The potential for a restart of Libyan oil flows into the market if the Gaddafi regime collapses weighed on the benchmark oil price. If Libyan production comes back it would ease gasoline prices and increase disposable income, potentially boosting economies worldwide.

Libyan government tanks and snipers put up scattered resistance in Tripoli after rebels swept into the heart of the capital, cheered on by crowds hailing the end of Muammar Gaddafi’s 42 years in power.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 0.46%, Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was up 0.18% and the Nasdaq Composite Index was up 0.24%.

Eurozone borrowing costs

The cost for eurozone banks to borrow money from one another rose again on Monday, heading back toward their highest levels since late 2008 as US banks remained wary of lending to European counterparts in the face of the intractable debt crisis.

The MSCI world equity index slipped 0.1% erasing early gains. The index has fallen for five weeks in a row and looks to be heading for its worst monthly performance since October 2008, when markets were reeling after the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

Some investors are hoping for the Federal Reserve to announce a new form of stimulus, not long after it promised to keep interest rates “exceptionally low ... at least through mid-2013.”

Additional bond purchases by the Fed could help reflate asset prices, but many view the chances of a third round of quantitative easing as limited and expect the Fed to take gradual measures to boost the economy.

The Fed will host its annual retreat in Wyoming this week, and recent market turmoil and signs of weaker US growth have boosted expectations that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke may hint at more emergency stimulus for the economy.

The speculation put some early pressure on the dollar. But the US currency was last up 0.1% against a basket of major currencies.

“The Fed is definitely on people’s minds, and you could argue that some of the bounce seen in high-yield commodity currencies is at least in part related to hopes for more policy measures,” said Wells Fargo strategist Vassili Serebriakov in New York.

Gold hit a third consecutive all-time high near $1 900 after staging its biggest weekly gain in 2-1/2 years last week. Spot gold was up 1.6% at $1 888.90 an ounce in morning trade in New York, having earlier hit a record $1 894.10.

 
 
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