China’s gross domestic product eased to 9.1 percent for the quarter, slightly below forecast of 9.2 percent, indicating the world’s second-largest economy expanded at its slowest pace since the second quarter of 2009.”The pace of moderation has so far been measured, and today’s numbers reinforce our view that a soft landing is in sight,” said Connie Tse, Economist at Forecast in Singapore.China is also Australia’s top trading partner. The Reserve Bank of Australia made clear on Tuesday that it felt inflation was now less of a worry, cementing market expectations for an interest rate cut as early as next month.Investors rushed to seek protection in the options market against losses, with the CBOE Volatility index VIX .VIX — a 30-day risk forecast of volatility in the S&P 500 — rising 18.2 percent to 33.39 on Monday, its highest one-day jump since August. .NIn Asian credit markets, spreads on the iTraxx Asia ex-Japan investment grade index, another gauge for whether investor risk appetite is returning, widened by about 13 basis points on Tuesday, after tightening by about 26 points over the past week on hopes of progress in Europe.Germany’s finance minister, Wolfgang Schaeuble, said on Monday that even though European governments would adopt a five-point platform to address the crisis, a definitive solution would not be reached at the October 23 European Union summit.This came in the heels of a Group of 20 meeting of finance ministers in Paris the past weekend, which had raised expectations that European banks would be recapitalised, and the region’s bailout fund expanded to deal with a potential debt default by Greece.”Although markets were not expecting the debt crisis to be resolved overnight, shares prices are likely to succumb to profit-taking after a rally,” said Hiroichi Nishi, equity general manager at SMBC Nikko Securities.MSCI’s broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS fell 2.7 percent, with the materials sector .MIAPJMT00PUS in the MSCI index slumping more than 3 percent.The Nikkei stock average .N225 fell 1.5 percent, while Australian shares were down 1.9 percent. .TWorld stocks, as measured by the MSCI’s all-country world equity index .MIWD00000PUS, fell 1 percent, and U.S. stocks suffered their worst loss in two weeks on Monday, with the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI down 2.12 percent.The MSCI have recovered from 15-month lows by more than 10 percent in the past nine days, on growing expectations Europe was finally accelerating efforts to resolve its debt crisis.”Don’t expect a long running leg of good news. There isn’t a trend right now,” Colin Bradbury, Daiwa Capital Markets’ regional chief strategist for Asia ex-Japan, said of the headlines news about the European debt issues.Given that this is the fourth quarter, and very strong potential for a rebound in some stocks, investors may be tempted to lock in short-term profits to add whatever return they can get, he said.Concerns about the euro zone sovereign debt problems hurting sentiment, a slowdown in the Asian regional growth and an expected downgrade to earnings forecasts over the next 3-6 months will likely continue to pressure the markets, he said.Asian shares are extremely cheap, and coule spur buying and limit the downside from here, but it is currently “too soon to be jumping back into high beta cyclicals,” he said.Technicals were also turning bearish, suggesting risk aversion remains.The euro failed to breach a September high against the dollar around $1.39 on Moonday, while the Australian dollar has faced resistance at its 200-day moving average of $1.03792.The S&P 500 also turned around from its August 31 high around 1,230.The euro fell from a one-month high against the dollar of $1.39148 hit on Monday.Oil was also lower, with Brent crude down 0.2 percent to $109.90 a barrel and U.S. crude futures down 0.3 percent at $86.10.Retreating appetite for risks benefited government bonds, with 10-year U.S. Treasuries gaining 23/32 in price to yield 2.17 percent on Monday.But other assets perceived as safe-haven such as gold were lackluster, with spot gold was nearly flat and the dollar index .DXY was also little changed.
“Apple plans to hold an invitation-only memorial service for
Jobs apart from an employee event. Samsung’s president Lee
Jae-yong plans to attend the service to offer condolence to
Jobs,” the source said.Lee is the only son of and heir apparent to Samsung chairman
Lee Kun-hee.Media reported that Lee would have a separate meeting with
Apple CEO Tim Cook after the memorial service and discuss
bilateral cooperation, but the source did not confirm the
report.Apple Inc co-founder and technology visionary Jobs will be
memorialized at a private service at Stanford University on
Sunday, a source with knowledge of the event told Reuters on
Friday.A Dutch court on Friday turned down Samsung’s
request for an injunction against all of Apple’s mobile
products that use 3G telecommunications technology, denying it
revenge over a similar move by Apple.
* Brent rises toward $113 on optimism over debt crisis* Euro extends gains against dollar after U.S. sales data* Bonds succumb to rising equity markets, retail salesBy Herbert LashNEW YORK, Oct 14 (Reuters) - Global stocks gained and the
euro strengthened on Friday on growing optimism that Europe is
on track to resolve its sovereign debt crisis and after data
showed a surge in U.S. retail sales.Group of 20 finance ministers and central bank chiefs began
two days of talks in Paris on Friday. Although investors do not
expect a comprehensive strategy to Europe’s debt crisis to come
out of Friday’s meeting, they hope it will provide an
opportunity for officials to agree on the outlines of a plan in
time for a European Union summit on Oct. 23.Government data that U.S. retail sales grew by 1.1 percent
in September, the fastest pace in seven months, also boosted
investor sentiment on the economy and the data was expected to
help lift economic growth forecasts.The data, coupled with earnings from Google late
Thursday that trounced analysts’ expectations, led investors to
shrug off a rating downgrade on Spain by Standard & Poor’s and
an unexpected slump in U.S. consumer confidence in October.The benchmark S&P 500 was on track for back-to-back weekly
gains for the first time since early July, and gold headed
toward its strongest weekly rise in over a month, signs that
investors expect a resolution to Europe’s debt crisis is near.”The data hasn’t mattered for a couple of months. It
matters here and there, but most of what today is, is Europe,”
said John Canally, investment strategist for LPL Financial in
Boston about how the G20 meeting trumped the economic data.”Just getting the details of this plan out there and making
the details work is the most important thing,” Canally said.Stocks on Wall Street jumped about 1 percent while shares
in Europe closed up 0.8 percent.The euro rose 0.7 percent to $1.3867.The Dow Jones industrial average was up 101.57
points, or 0.88 percent, at 11,579.70. The Standard & Poor’s
500 Index was up 13.19 points, or 1.10 percent, at
1,216.85. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up 30.44
points, or 1.16 percent, at 2,650.68.Google led the Nasdaq higher as its shares jumped 5.8
percent to $591.50 after the Internet search giant said robust
growth at its mobile business and a strong emerging market
lifted its third quarter, allaying worries that a slowing
Europe was hurting business.In Europe, the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top
regional shares provisionally closed up 0.8 percent at 974.46
points, while MSCI’s all-country world equity index gained 1.1 percent.The increased appetite for risk on Friday also lifted the
price of crude oil more than 2.0 percent and pushed down the
U.S. dollar and government debt, which usually benefit when
news is bearish.”The outlook is good and getting better by the day. Risk
is back on,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ in New York.Brent crude rose above $114 a barrel, propelled by
hopes that European leaders would soon agree on how to curtail
the long festering euro zone debt crisis.Early hints that China may loosen credit as inflation cools
also boosted gains while investors mostly ignored a preliminary
reading of consumer sentiment that sagged to 57.5 from 59.4 in
September, a Thomson Michigan survey
showed.November Brent crude rose $3.02 to $114.13 a barrel
on the day of its expiry, while U.S. crude was up $2.17
at $86.40 a barrel.U.S. Treasury debt prices fell.The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was
down 19/32 in price to yield 2.25 percent.Spot gold prices rose $4.99 to $1,671.10 an ounce.
Lone Star has until Thursday to submit an appeal.Market talk has swirled that Hana may seek to cut the
purchase price as KEB shares have plummeted sharply since the
transaction was agreed amid a global financial market rout.”We haven’t decided yet (on renegotiation) and we are
waiting to see whether (Lone Star) files an appeal or not,” Hana
chairman Kim Seung-yu told Reuters by telephone on Wednesday.Korean regulators plan to decide whether to approve Hana’s
purchase of KEB after Lone Star’s move on last week’s verdict.Lawyers for Lone Star were not immediately available for
comment.Shares in Hana fell 0.7 percent and KEB advanced 0.9 percent
versus the broader market’s 0.5 percent fall as of 0033
GMT.
Jung Ji-hoon, known by his stage name Rain, is part of the “Korean Wave” of drama and popular music that has taken Asia by storm over the past decade and his third album, “It’s Raining,” sold a million copies in Asia after its release in 2004.”It is so sad that Mr Rain will be gone for two years,” said Sachiko, a weeping Japanese fan who came to Korea for Rain’s last concert and to witness his enlistment.”I am sure all his fans back in Japan would have wanted to be here today. So we want to make sure we see him off properly.”As well as music, Rain has built a career in film and began his Hollywood career as a minor character in Wachowski Brother’s “Speed Racer.” He was cast as the lead actor for his second Hollywood film, “Ninja Assassin,” which won him the “Biggest Badass” award from MTV.The three-times winner of TIME magazine’s annual ‘TIME 100 Poll’ in 2006, 2007 and 2011 will undertake 21 months of compulsory military service in the South Korean armed forces.”Thank you for loving me so much for the past 10 years. Goodbye and I’ll be back,” Rain told his fans.Korean drama heart-throb Hyun Bin, best known for his role in the drama “Secret Garden,” attracted thousands of fans when he signed up for military service this year.The 28-year-old won a sharpshooter badge and was posted to an island on the tense border with North Korea, which remains technically at war with the South after the Korean War ended in 1953 with an armistice.