• Home
  • Mail
  • Flickr
  • Tumblr
  • News
  • Sports
  • Finance
  • Celebrity
  • Answers
  • Groups
  • Mobile
  • More
  • FirefoxTry Yahoo Finance on Firefox »
Yahoo
    • Sign in
    • Mail
    • Finance Home
    • Yahoo Originals
      • Market Movers
      • Midday Movers
      • The Final Round
      • Sportsbook
      • Trending Tickers
      • Andy Serwer
      • Brittany Jones-Cooper
      • Daniel Howley
      • Daniel Roberts
      • David Pogue
      • Ethan Wolff-Mann
      • JP Mangalindan
      • Julia La Roche
      • Melody Hahm
      • Nicole Sinclair
      • Rick Newman
      • Sam Ro
      • Contributors
    • Personal Finance
      • Retirement
      • Lifestyle
      • [Video]
      • Currency Converter
    • Tech
    • Market Data
      • Trending Tickers
      • Stocks: Most Actives
      • Stocks: Gainers
      • Stocks: Losers
      • Top ETFs
      • Commodities
      • World Indices
      • Currencies
      • Top Mutual Funds
      • Most Traded Options by Volume
      • US Treasury Bonds Rates
      • Calendars
    • Industry News
      • Energy
      • Financial
      • Healthcare
      • Business Services
      • Telecom & Utilities
      • Computer Hardware & Electronics
      • Computer Software & Services
      • Industrials
      • Manufacturing & Materials
      • Consumer Products & Media
      • Diversified Business
      • Retailing & Hospitality
    • NEW
      My Screeners
    • My Portfolio
        Sign In
    U.S. Markets close in 17 mins.
    • S&P 500
      2,126.35
      41.17 (1.97%)
    • Dow 30
      18,212.72
      324.44 (1.81%)

    Dollar, U.S. stock futures steady; U.S. government shutdown seen short

    ReutersOctober 1, 2013
    A traffic controller at a constructing site is reflected on a stock quotation board at a brokerage in Tokyo
    A traffic controller at a constructing site is reflected on a stock quotation board at a brokerage in Tokyo October 1, 2013. REUTERS/Issei Kato

    By Dominic Lau

    TOKYO (Reuters) - The dollar and U.S. stock futures held steady on Wednesday as investors bet the first partial U.S. government shutdown in 17 years will be short-lived.

    Sentiment was also supported by robust U.S. manufacturing activity, which expanded at its fastest pace in almost 2-1/2 years.

    U.S. S&P futures added 0.1 percent after the cash index (.SPX) advanced 0.8 percent on Tuesday as investors viewed a pullback over the past week as a buying opportunity. U.S. Treasury futures slipped 5-1/2 ticks.

    Australian (.AXJO) and Seoul (.KS11) shares were expected to open higher.

    While global financial markets appeared hopeful that the shutdown will be short-lived, the immediate impact for investors is a drop off in U.S. economic data at a time when they are trying to gauge if the Federal Reserve will soon scale back stimulus.

    The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, which was scheduled to publish the closely watched non-farm payrolls report on Friday, said it would not issue anything until government operations resumed.

    Congress missed a midnight deadline to agree on a bill that funds government operations, resulting in up to one million workers being put on unpaid leave, as Democrats and Republicans fight over President Barack Obama's healthcare program.

    "We think risk sensitive currencies are vulnerable while the shutdown persists and that the dollar is likely to trade defensively until a resolution is reached," analysts at BNP Paribas wrote in a client note.

    "At the same time, we wouldn't overstate the dollar's vulnerability," they said, adding that their analysis suggested that the market is no longer holding long dollar positions and the possibility of an end to the shutdown meant investors will be reluctant to get too bearish on the dollar.

    The dollar stood at 98.05 yen after falling as low as 97.65 yen on Tuesday.

    The Nikkei share average (NIK:^9452) was expected to open slightly lower, with Nikkei futures in Chicago slipping 0.3 percent from the close in Osaka.

    Ahead of the European Central Bank's policy meeting later in the day, the euro was steady at $1.35235, having hit an 8-month high of $1.3589 in European trade on Tuesday.

    The ECB is widely expected to stick to its policy course.

    ($1 = 98.1000 Japanese yen)

    (Additional reporting by Ian Chua; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

    Recently Viewed
    Your list is empty.

    What to Read Next

    • Why a Donald Trump victory would be great for stock market investors

      Yahoo Finance
    • Ivanka Trump is trying to distance herself from her father's campaign to save her brand

      Business Insider
    • AT&T will give away free Apple TVs and Fire Sticks with its new $35 streaming TV service

      Business Insider
    • General electric stock goes negative, sets up for a short trade -- plus jim cramer's take

      The Street
    • Why Democrats Are Worried About Tomorrow's Election

      Bloomberg Video
    • From biomass to nuclear: The evolution of American energy usage since 1776

      Yahoo Finance
    • Mark Cuban: Obamacare is the world's biggest start-up, and Trump has no clue how it works

      CNBC
    • Google made it incredibly easy to figure out where you should go to vote on Election Day

      Business Insider
    • Why Google really spent $625 million on a company generating $92 million in revenue

      Business Insider
    • Donald Trump’s Tax Maneuvers Comes Down To America’s Morals

      Fortune
    • Citigroup's Fordham: Breversal Isn't Likely

      Bloomberg Video
    • Why Uber is the perfect employer for my 70-year-old, hot-air balloon pilot father

      Yahoo Finance
    • Apple sends the iPhone 4 to the land of obsolete gadgets

      Business Insider
    • Obama's chief tech boss explains the shortage of women in tech

      Yahoo Finance
    • Facebook and Apple now have the same problem

      Yahoo Finance
    • 3 Surprisingly Great Kirkland-Brand Products at Costco

      Kiplinger.com

    Obama Lights Torch for Hillary Clinton to Carry in Last Day of Campaign Speeches

    Todd: Kinda of like Benghazi - Hillary was too busy with her pay to play scheme and was not mining the store. Just like Obama campaigning for Hillary - Who is minding the store?

    Join the Conversation
    1 / 5

    40

    • Closing Bell Exchange: Election market watch

      CNBC Videos
    • All eyes on upcoming Line offering amid a dismal IPO market

      Yahoo Finance
    • Why a Republican Plan to Block Clinton SCOTUS Nominees Is Doomed

      The Fiscal Times
    • El-Erian: 4 things to know about the longest stock market selloff since 1980

      Yahoo Finance
    • The final national polls show Hillary Clinton in position to win the election

      Business Insider
    • Can Frontier Communications Bounce Back After Last Week's 23% Drop? -- The Motley Fool

      The Motley Fool
    • Down-ballot battle

      CNBC Videos
    • Citi analyst warns Brexit is bad news for Apple iPhone sales

      Yahoo Finance
    • The Clinton campaign appears to be in full-blown panic mode over a state that hasn't gone red in 2 decades

      Business Insider
    • Ted Nugent grabs himself onstage at Trump rally in Michigan: 'I've got your blue state right here'

      Business Insider
    • These seats are the worst innovation airlines have come up with, and I spent 15 hours suffering in them

      Business Insider
    • Secrets of the Millionaire Next Door

      Kiplinger.com
    • Border Barometer: Mexico's View of the U.S. Election

      Bloomberg Video
    • Record lows in US bonds are signalling a reckoning with stocks

      Yahoo Finance
    • Tesla is killing one of its biggest benefits for new customers

      Business Insider
    • Data Disclaimer
    • Help
    • Suggestions