By Marius Zaharia
LONDON, July 24 (Reuters) - Metal prices hit multi-year lows
on Friday after weaker-than-expected data from China and the
euro zone raised concerns about global growth, but the U.S.
dollar rose as a Federal Reserve rate hike was still on the
table.
London copper fell to its lowest level since 2009 after a
survey showed China's factory sector contracted by the most in
15 months in July due to shrinking orders, fuelling worries over
demand in the top metals consumer as stockpiles steadily mount.
The flash Caixin/Markit China Manufacturing Purchasing
Managers' Index (PMI) dropped to 48.2, below economists'
estimate for a reading of 49.7. It was the fifth straight month
below 50, the level which separates contraction from expansion.
ID:nL3N1032YR
Euro zone business activity also started the second half on
a less secure footing than expected, hit by Greece's
near-bankruptcy woes. Markit's flash PMI fell to 53.7 this month
from June's four-year high of 54.2. A Reuters poll had predicted
a more modest dip to 54.0.
While economies looked weaker in Europe and Asia,
better-than-expected U.S. jobless claims kept the Federal
Reserve on track for a rate hike in coming months.
The U.S. dollar was 0.3 percent higher against a basket of
currencies .DXY .
"What a conundrum we face: commodities are shouting that the
global economy is deteriorating, key emerging markets are
already seeing major volatility, and yet the world's most
important central bank is close to tightening monetary policy,"
Michael Every, head of financial market research for Asia at
Rabobank.
In a busy day for corporate updates on Friday, BASF
BASFn.DE , the world's largest chemicals firm by sales,
slightly missed expectations with a 2 percent rise in operating
profit, with profits of French food group Danone DANO.PA also
falling short of expectations.
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 hit a one-week
low early in the day , but quickly rebounded to trade 0.2
percent higher at 1582.67. Euro zone bond yields fell. GVD/EUR
"We should keep in mind that the ECB (European Central
Bank)has quite optimistic growth assumptions underlying their QE
scheme," Commerzbank strategist Michael Leister said.
"So if we get a comprehensive set of disappointing data it
will increase the expectation that the ECB will have to keep QE
longer or increase the monthly size."
The Australian dollar, often used as a liquid proxy for
China trades, hit a six-year trough of $0.7295 AUD=D4 . Slowing
Chinese growth means less demand for commodities such as iron
ore, one of Australia's chief exports. The recent decline in a
wide range of commodities, including oil, has weighed on
currencies like the Canadian and Australian dollars.
London CMNI3 and Shanghai nickel SZNcv1 contracts both
fell 1.2-1.4 percent.
China looks set to further reduce interest rates and the
amount of cash its banks must hold as reserves to try to keep
its economy growing at 7 percent this year, which would be the
slowest pace in a quarter of a century, a Reuters poll showed on
Thursday. ID:nL3N1013QG
The euro dipped to $1.0952 EUR= after the European data,
still well above last week's 3-month low of $1.0808.
Gold XAU= slid more than 1 percent to its lowest since
early 2010 on Friday, on course for its biggest weekly loss in
nine months. GOL/
Crude oil futures rebounded from multi-month lows , with
U.S. crude CLc1 up 25 cents at $48.70 a barrel. Oil prices in
the United States have slumped more than 20 percent in the past
six weeks. Brent September crude LCOc1 was up 7 cents at
$55.34 a barrel.