world summary: us equities recover on better growt

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    Final World Summary: US EQUITIES RECOVER ON BETTER GROWTH
    08:19, Friday, 26 May 2006

    Sydney - Friday - May 26: (RWE Aust Business News)- US equities
    have continued to regain ground after a good growth rate in the first
    quarter and interest rate uncertainty slipped into the background.

    One jarring note was another rise in energy costs and lower
    first quarter corporate profits after tax showing a rise of 8.8 per cent
    against 13.8 per cent in the fourth quarter.

    However, investors were encouraged by the US economy which has
    been which was revised to 5.3 per cent, better than expected for the
    first quarter.

    It was the fastest growth in 2-1/2 years, as companies built up
    inventories and exports strengthened, according to a Commerce Department
    report.

    First-quarter growth in gross domestic product was more than
    triple the 1.7 per cent annual rate recorded in last year's fourth
    quarter, though still slightly below Wall Street predictions for a 5.7
    per cent rate.

    Prices remained in check, with the core personal consumption
    expenditures (PCE) price index rising at a 2 per cent rate compared with
    2.4 per cent in the fourth quarter.

    This is the most watch inflation indicator by the Fed and should
    contribute to a possible pause in interest rate rises.

    On Wall Street the Dow settled 94 points higher, the S&P 500 up a
    solid 14, the Nasdaq composite 29 and the 100 index gaining 20 on the
    close.

    Treasuries weakened despite a successful $14 billion 5 year note
    auction.

    It produced a yield of yield of 4.945 per cent, the lowest in
    two months.

    But the yield was higher than the 4.934 per cent traders
    forecast.

    Energy costs increased after the July crude contract gained $1.46
    to $71.32 barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange overnight.

    Distillate stocks also rose more than expected, though crude
    inventories fell more than expected.

    In other economic data the pace of existing home sales in the
    United States fell 2.0 per cent in April, roughly in line with
    expectations, as higher mortgage interest rates ate into buyers' ability
    to purchase homes.

    Sales of existing US homes fell to a seasonally adjusted annual
    rate of 6.76 million units in April from a downwardly revised level of
    6.90 million in March, according to the National Association of
    Realtors.

    April's rate was down 5.7 per cent compared with the
    7.17-million-unit pace a year earlier.

    In market news, Enron chief Lay has been found guilty on all
    counts, and Skilling on most counts in the fraud and conspiracy trial of
    the former Enron executives.

    The verdict climaxes a landmark case that grew out of Enron's
    December 2001 collapse into bankruptcy and sparked corporate and
    governmental reforms. Sentencing is set for Sept. 11.

    In another development Yahoo and Ebay unveiled a multiyear
    Web-search and advertising partnership, teaming up to take on the growing
    power of search-giant Google. Yahoo and eBay shares rallied.

    The Australian dollar climbed more than three quarters of a cent
    to US76.07c in New York trading overnight as the gold price recovers
    $11.40 to $648.40 oz on the COMEX spot month.


    WALL STREET ... The Dow Jones industrial average index settled
    93.73 points higher at 11,211.05, the Standard and Poor's 500 index ended
    14.31 better at 1272.88 while the Nasdaq Composite index finished 29.07
    higher at 2198.24 and the Nasdaq 100 index rose 19.50 to 1599.68 on the
    close.

    Treasuries failed to react to the better 5 year note auction. The
    10 year cash paper fell 9/32 ticks to 100 12/32, lifting the yield 4
    points to 5.08 per cent, 30-year bond yield also rose 4 points to 5.18
    per cent while the 2year note yield gained 2 points to 4.97 per cent.


    US DOLLAR ... has been weaker against major currencies, trading
    at 111.79 yen from around 112.87 yen previously in New York. The euro was
    $US1.2797 against 1.2759 while sterling was $US1.8720 compared with
    1.8689 previously. The US dollar on the Swiss franc was steady at 1.2178
    against 1.2178.


    AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR ... rose strongly on the greenback as gold
    rallied. The dollar is currently US76.07c in New York trading. This
    compared with yesterday's local close of US75.21c. Overnight, it has
    traded as high as US76.09c and as low as US75.21c. The Aussie is worth
    85.01 yen (pre 84.99), 0.5941 euros (pre 0.5901) and 40.64 pence on
    sterling (pre 40.29).


    AUSTRALIAN SHAREMARKET ... traders are expecting a strong
    performance today in line with early futures up 69 points already.
    Goldman Sach JB Were market analyst Richard Coppleson is looking for big
    rises in resources stocks after some wild trading in the past few days.
    Oil stocks should rise after another big jump in the price of crude
    overnight. The general market should benefit from recovery on Wall Street
    which saw the Dow up 94 points overnight while the S&P 500 and the
    Nasdaqs also posted solid gains. Today GlobalNet Asia Pacific will
    commence trading on the ASX.


    EUROPEAN SHAREMARKETS ... finished higher after Wall started
    well and traders were impressed with some corporate results. Key markets
    saw London up 91 points, Paris 80, Frankfurt 119 but Zurich was closed
    along with Finland and Sweden.

    In London traders were helped by good company results from Tate &
    Lyle and Barclays. Equities improved as trading progressed led by miners
    Anglo American and Kazakhmys.

    Groupe Bruxelles Lambert closed higher in Brussels after agreeing
    to sell its 25 per cent stake in German media conglomerate Bertelsmann
    back to the company for 4.5 billion euros.

    Tate & Lyle shares rose after the sugar producer disclosed
    profit before taxes, amortization and exceptional items rose 16 per cent,
    which was above predictions. U.K. bank Barclays reversed early losses, to
    close up after reporting revenue was growing more quickly than forecast.
    U.K. telecommunications provider Cable & Wireless ended lower after its 3
    per cent fall in profit before taxes. Morrison Supermarkets finished the
    day higher after it reported a 3.7 per cent same-store sales rise,
    excluding fuel sales.

    BAA, the operator of London's Gatwick and Heathrow
    airports, fell as much as 6 per cent at one stage after the Office of
    Fair Trade said it would examine the U.K. airports market, a move the
    company called a "surprise." The London Stock Exchange fell sharply
    despite announcing a 9 per cent profit rise. LSE shares have come under
    pressure following the NYSE Group's moves to acquire Euronext. Rival
    bourses retreated with the Euronext down around 1.9 per cent and Deutsche
    Boerse losing more than 3 per cent.

    Mining stocks boosted market confidence with BHP Billiton up 3
    per cent and Rio Tinto 3.1 per cent higher as stronger copper prices
    Anglo American, the world's third-largest miner, gained 2.9 per cent.

    Energy stocks rose, with Total adding 2.1 per cent a nd BP up 2.3
    per cent as crude moved above $70 a barrel. Britain's BG Group added 4.9
    per cent.

    At the close London's FTSE 100 rebounded 90.6 points to 5677.70,
    Paris CAC-40 regained 79.51 points to 4949.53 while the Frankfurt DAX 30
    climbed 118.83 to 5706.06 but Zurich was closed. In other markets
    Amsterdam rose 4 points, Brussels up 44, Madrid General 18, while Milan
    retrieved 353 and Oslo was closed.


    METALS ...rebound. May gold rose $11.40 to $648.40 oz on the
    COMEX spot month while the June contract regained $11.00 to $648.50 oz.
    May silver rose 9c to to $12.54 oz, July platinum improved $9.90 to
    $1295.00 oz, Spot copper (May) recovered 6.85c to 390.15c lb in New York.

    Three months closing LME bid prices were copper $8050 tonne, tin
    $8000, lead $1085 zinc $3515, aluminium $2753 and nickel $22,100 tonne.

    On the three months official bid prices, copper rose $119 to
    $8099 tonne but tin fell $245 to $8125 while lead was steady at $1110.
    Zinc rose $120 to $3530, while aluminium slipped $9.50 to $2759.50 and
    nickel ended $100 higher at $22,095 tonne.


    OIL ... settled $1.46 higher on the spot July contract at $71.32
    barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange with a high of $71.38 and low
    $69.90 barrel. The August contract gained $1.48 to $72.09 barrel with the
    high of $72.20 and low $70.75. The Brent ICE June crude futures regained
    $1.49 to $70.71 barrel with a high of $70.79 and low $69.05 barrel.

    The CRB index rose 3.84 points to 346.35.

    ENDS

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