RTRS:GLOBAL MARKETS-World shares gain, dollar slips after Obama win
* World shares gain after Obama win, European shares up 0.3
pct
* U.S. stock futures point to higher open on Wall Street
* Euro up 0.2 pct as dollar falls against most major
currencies
* Gold and oil gain
By Marc Jones and Richard Hubbard
LONDON, Nov 7 (Reuters) - World shares and gold rallied
while the dollar fell on Wednesday after President Barack Obama
was re-elected for a second term, signalling no dramatic shift
in U.S. economic policy.
Gains in Europe's main stock markets were expected to be
limited, however, as attention switches to Greece where
parliament votes late in the day on an austerity package needed
to secure a fresh injection of EU/IMF aid and avert bankruptcy.
"The fact the election is over is obviously positive for the
market. Markets don't like uncertainty and there was always the
worry that it was going to drag on," said Mark Priest, Head of
Index & Equity Market Making at ETX Capital.
"A lot depends on this vote today in Greece, so I think it
is a little bit of wait-and-see."
The FTSE Eurofirst 300 index of top European shares
was up 0.3 percent by 0930 GMT at 1,119.65 points, with London's
FTSE 100, Frankfurt's DAX and Paris's CAC-40
opening between 0.2 and 0.6 percent higher.
Relief that the U.S. election result was clear cut earlier
helped to lift Asian shares, pushing the MSCI world equity index
up 0.5 percent at 332.75 points. U.S. stock
futures pointed to Wall Street opening higher as well.
Investors in most major markets were expected to be wary of
extending the gains too far due to the approaching U.S. "fiscal
cliff", a series of spending cuts and tax increases worth around
$600 billion due to take effect next year that could crush
growth.
The dollar, which has rallied during this week's tense
run-up to the election, slipped 0.2 percent against a basket of
currencies, retreating further from Monday's two-month
high. The euro rallied to a session high of $1.2876.
"You clearly see the dollar under pressure here but the key
question is whether this will be sustained," said Valentin
Marinov, Director of FX Strategy at Citi. "People will be
refocusing away from the election to more important issues
surrounding the fiscal cliff ... So we may have to endure some
more uncertainty into year end."
GREEK VOTE
As markets digested the U.S. news, focus was also returning
to the euro zone's troubles.
Serious questions about Spain's plans to repair its finances
are likely to surface later with a media report saying European
Commission forecasts, due out later, see the country's economy
shrinking 1.5 percent next year, far worse than the 0.5 percent
drop projected by Madrid itself.
In Greece, where the debt crisis began, parliament holds a
late evening vote on 13.5 billion euros of fresh cuts and tax
hikes planned by the government of Prime Minister Antonis
Samaras. Approval is crucial to unlocking 31.5 billion euros in
aid that has been on hold for months.
"The general expectation is that Samaras will be able to get
his plans through but it will be a pretty narrow victory," said
Sybren Brouwer head of equity strategy at ABN Amro.
"It is a continuation of the process of muddling through and
taking two steps forward and one step back. Hopefully today we
are going to take one step forward but there are many steps
still ahead."
STATUS QUO
Bond markets took Obama's win largely in their stride. With
the U.S. Senate still divided, economists see the result doing
little to smooth "fiscal cliff" negotiations. On the other hand
it is expected to keep U.S. monetary policy extremely loose,
with Ben Bernanke expected to remain as Federal Reserve chief.
U.S. Treasury futures were about 15/64 higher at
132-60/64 points, compared with a high of 133-19/64 seen in
Asian trading. Thirty-year U.S. bond yields stood at
2.91 percent versus a low of 2.858 percent.
In Europe, benchmark German government bonds were stable
with yields at 1.44 percent, while Spanish and
Italian debt was trading broadly steady.
.
Gold, which is seen as both a safe haven and a
protection against future inflation, rose 0.5 percent to a
one-week high of $1,724.21 an ounce. Growth-sensitive copper
rose 1.1 percent and oil was steady at just over $111 a
barrel.
"Overall, when incumbents win elections, it usually means
continuation of the status quo. So an Obama win will present
fewer uncertainties in the minds of investors," said a
Shanghai-based commodities trader.