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Treasuries Slide on U.S. Jobs Growth as U.S. Stocks Fluctuate
 		   						 							 									
bloomberg
 	
									March 7, 2014 - 17:23 							 March 7 (Bloomberg) -- Treasuries fell for a fourth day, while oil and  the dollar rose as stronger-than-forecast jobs growth fueled optimism in  the American economy. U.S. stocks fluctuated on Ukrainian tensions over  the future of Crimea.
Treasury yields increased five basis points to 2.79 percent as of 11:57  a.m. in New York. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was up 0.2 percent,  while the ruble headed for a fourth weekly decline of more than 1  percent. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slipped 0.1 percent. Copper  futures headed for the biggest loss in more than two years, while West  Texas Intermediate crude added 1 percent.
The Labor Department said employers added 175,000 jobs in February,  topping the median forecast of economists for 149,000 and signaling the  economy is starting to bounce back from a weather-induced setback.  Russia said Ukraine must pay off almost $2 billion it owes it for  natural gas by today and signaled it may cut supplies, ratcheting up the  pressure on its cash- strapped neighbor. China’s onshore bond market  had its first default.
“The more we can add jobs and get the economy to organically grow  through traditional measures is a wonderful thing and equity markets are  reacting to this as we expected,” Darrell Cronk, the New York-based  regional chief investment officer at Wells Fargo Private Bank, which  manages $170 billion, said by phone. “We want this economy to stand on  its own two feet. We want this to be a self-sustaining growth engine.”
Equity Markets
Global stocks are poised for a fifth week of gains as concern eased that  Russia’s incursion into Ukraine would spark a broader conflict.  Ukraine, a key transit nation for east-west energy supplies, is  struggling to keep hold of Crimea after pro- Russian forces seized  control of the peninsula. The West has urged Russia to pull back, and  began yesterday to impose sanctions.
The S&P 500 rallied 1 percent in the previous four days and is  headed for a second weekly gain. More than $4 trillion has been added to  equity values around the world since the Feb. 4 low to a record $63  trillion.
Data yesterday showed claims for unemployment benefits fell to a  three-month low last week, stoking speculation U.S. companies are  confident economic growth will rebound after harsh winter weather  depressed demand.
Among U.S. shares moving today, Safeway Inc. slid 2.6 percent as  investors weighed potential antitrust hurdles to an offer for the  company. GT Advanced Technologies Inc. climbed 4.6 percent after Credit  Suisse Group AG advised investors to buy the shares.
Rolling Thunder
“There’s definitely concern about the Russia-Ukraine thunderstorm  rolling back into the market,” Chad Morganlander, a Florham Park, New  Jersey-based fund manager at Stifel Nicolaus & Co., which oversees  about $150 billion, said in a telephone interview. “That in itself is  causing some uncertainty among investors. The economy is continuing to  gradually improve. We’ve had very good market performance over the last  several weeks in spite of great uncertainty on the geopolitical front.”
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slipped 1.3 percent. Getinge AB, the maker of  sterilization systems, sank 21 percent after giving a first-quarter  profit forecast lower than analysts had estimated.
The U.S. sent six F-15 fighter jets to Lithuania and will dispatch 12  additional F-16s to Poland, the two countries’ defense ministries said  yesterday. The U.S. Navy sent the guided-missile destroyer USS Truxtun  into the Black Sea in what it called a routine visit unrelated to events  in Ukraine.
Dollar, Yen
The dollar rose to a six-week high against the yen, increasing 0.4  percent to 103.51 yen. The Chinese yuan posted its biggest weekly gain  since October on speculation the central bank has ceased engineering a  decline in the currency to discourage one-way appreciation bets.
Russia’s Micex Index has declined 7.3 percent this year. The ruble  weakened 0.7 percent to 42.7093 against Bank Rossii’s target basket of  dollars and euros, heading for a 1.6 percent decline for the week.
Russian stocks are headed for their worst week since President Vladimir  Putin cracked down on protesters following his election in May 2012.  Putin’s incursion into Ukraine’s Crimea region, like the imprisonment of  demonstrators following his return to the presidency two years ago, is  sparking investor concern that Russia’s economic growth will falter as  the U.S. and Europe threaten the country with sanctions.
Visa Restrictions
President Barack Obama’s administration restricted visas for Ukrainian  and Russian officials whom it said threaten the former Soviet republic’s  sovereignty. Lawmakers in Ukraine’s Crimea region called a referendum  to return the Black Sea peninsula to Russian control.
The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index of mainland companies listed in  Hong Kong rose 0.4 percent, trimming this week’s decline to 1.8 percent.  The Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.1 percent as investors weighed  reform prospects at a legislative meeting.
Shanghai Chaori Solar Energy Science & Technology Co. won’t make an  interest payment in full by the deadline, the company’s vice president  Liu Tielong said. The company blamed the failure of an agreement to sell  a power station to Greece for its failure to meet interest payments,  state-owned Xinhua News Agency reported, citing an unidentified person  at Chaori.
The first onshore default comes as China’s benchmark rate for loans  between lenders was set for the biggest weekly drop this year after the  central bank scaled back cash withdrawals in its money-market  operations.
Copper futures for delivery in May slid 4.1 percent to $3.0865 a pound in New York.
India’s S&P BSE Sensex Index climbed 3.8 percent this week, the most  since April. The country’s current-account deficit dropped to a  four-year low in the fourth quarter, the Reserve Bank of India said  March 5.
Indonesia’s rupiah rose to the highest since November and is 1.5 percent  stronger this week, making it the best performing Asian currency versus  the dollar in the last five days. India’s rupee is on track for a 1.1  percent weekly gain.
--With assistance from Adam Haigh in Sydney, Lilian Karunungan and  Kyoungwha Kim in Singapore, Emma O’Brien in Wellington, Inyoung Hwang,  Cecile Vannucci, John Deane, Stephen Kirkland, David Goodman and Paul  Dobson in London and Nick Gentle in Hong Kong.
To contact the reporter on this story: Michael P. Regan in New York at  
mregan12@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this  story: Lynn Thomasson at 
lthomasson@bloomberg.net Michael P. Regan  
 	
							bloomberg