The S&P GSCI Index of raw materials lost 0.4 percent as of 4:15 p.m. in New York and oil dropped 1 percent. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose less than 0.1 percent to 1,371.09, while Exxon Mobil Corp. and Merck & Co. led the Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDU) up 37.69 points to 12,959.71. Ten-year Treasury note yields added less than one basis point to 2.03 percent. The yen strengthened against 12 of its 16 most-traded peers. The euro climbed 0.3 percent to $1.3158.
China weakened its daily fixing for the yuan by the most since August 2010 after reporting the biggest trade deficit in at least 22 years on March 10, sapping optimism that was spurred last week by stronger-than-forecast jobs data in the U.S. European finance ministers are meeting in Brussels today to complete the 130 billion-euro ($170 billion) aid package for Greece and discuss Spain’s budget-cutting efforts.
“Commodity market watchers have cautioned quite some time ago that ‘as goes China so do commodities,’” Jon Nadler, an analyst at Kitco Inc. in Montreal, wrote in a note today. “When combined with the data concerning that country’s factory output and consumer retail activity, the conclusion that China is indeed experiencing notable difficulties is obviously not very hard to draw.”
Oil Declines
Sixteen of 24 commodities tracked by the S&P GSCI index declined. Oil fell 1 percent to $106.34 a barrel, natural gas declined 2.4 percent to settle at a 10-year low of $2.269 per million British thermal units and copper dropped 0.5 percent to $3.8375 a pound.
Hedge funds last week reduced bets on higher commodity prices for the first time in almost two months after China cut its growth target, just as prices rallied on signs the U.S. economyis improving and Greece is containing its debt crisis.
Premier Wen Jiabao cut China’s economic growth target for 2012 to 7.5 percent, compared with the median estimate of economists for a 2.2 percent expansion in the U.S., according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That would be the smallest gap since the Internet boom in 2000, the data show.
Money managers reduced combined bullish positions across 18 U.S. futu
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