US Dollar Tumbles While Wall Street Climbs

 | Jun 26, 2014 05:41AM ET

European markets closed lower on Wednesday, amid concern over the violence in Iraq. Wall Street rose with the Dow and S&P 500 bouncing back after a two-day decline, as speculators wagered the economy is rebounding from its worst quarterly performance in five years. Asian equity markets rose on Thursday following gains on Wall Street overnight but escalating tensions in Iraq limited gains. The Hang Seng was up by 0.94% while Nikkei 225 was up by 0.32% and a CSI 300 was up by 0.51%. Hong Kong stocks rose, with the benchmark index heading for a two-week high, as casino shares advanced and companies climbed on earnings.

The Federal Reserve’s lower-for- longer interest rate stance is spurring stocks and bonds as volatility subsides. It’s also fueling inflation expectations that threaten to bring asset prices tumbling down. The U.S. economy contracted in the first quarter by the most since the depths of the last recession as consumer spending cooled. It turns out the slump in US growth was much worse than anticipated. Growth for the March quarter fell 2.9 per cent — the weakest growth outcome in about five years. This is a fairly sizable downward revision from the second estimate by the way, which initially showed a 1 per cent falls.