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Thursday, 11 February 2016

Dollar, stocks plunge sparks scramble for safety

The dollar hit a 16-month low against the yen on Thursday and headed for its worst week since the Lehman crisis as investors scrambled for relative safety, buying up gold and top-rated bonds and dumping stocks.

Investors were spooked by worries over the direction of the global economy and by cautious comments from the head of the U.S. Federal Reserve that were taken to mean no near-term interest rate hikes.

European stocks fell .FTEU3 over 3 percent to a 2-1/2 year low with banks plunging 6 percent and the Swedish crown tumbling as its central bank waded in with a surprise cut to its already deeply negative interest rates.

Britain's FTSE 100 .FTSE dropped 2.5 percent, Germany's DAX .GDAXI fell 3 percent, and Italian .FTMIB and Greek shares .ATG both lost 5 percent on their familiar banking sector and bailout worries.

The pace wasn't expected to let up. Wall Street was expected to start almost 2 percent in the red and demand for U.S. Treasuries drove longer-term yields to three-year lows and flattened the yield curve in a way that has presaged economic recession in the past.

"What this shows is that the risk-off mode has come back very quickly and that the worst may still be to come in these markets," said Rabobank European strategist Emile Cardon.

"What is different to previous times is that the bad news in now coming from everywhere, China, Portugal the U.S. the commodity sector the banking sector. It's like several smaller crises could combine into one big crisis."

Benchmark European German Bund yields DE10YT=TWEB dropped and UK yields UK10YT=TWEB hit an all-time low too, as traders dumping riskier assets sent Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese bonds in the opposite direction.

The euro zone's finance ministers are set to meet later with worries creeping back in about Greece and Portugal's ability to stick to the terms of their bailouts again as well. Portuguese bonds PT10YT=TWEB saw their biggest selloff in 2-1/2 years.

YELLEN

The flight from risk told on most Asian shares, with Hong Kong .HSI - a favorite channel for global investors to play China - diving 4.2 percent as investors there returned from the long Lunar New year holidays. Mainland China markets are closed all week.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS shed 1.4 percent, and South Korea .KS11 resumed with a 2.9 percent drop.

Wall Street had ended Wednesday mixed after Fed Chair Janet Yellen sounded optimistic on the U.S. economy, but acknowledged risks from market turmoil and a slowdown in China.

Analysts took that to mean a hike in March was unlikely, but further tightening remained possible later in the year.

"Yellen made it clear that while the Fed still expects to continue on its gradual tightening path, policy was not on a pre-set course and would respond appropriately to developments," said Justin Fabo, a senior economist at ANZ.

"The real test may come later, if markets continue to deteriorate and look to central banks to save them. Are policymakers' guns loaded with blanks?"

YIELDS STEAM ROLLERED

It seemed some were already preparing for the worst.

Longer-term U.S. debt rallied hard as investors wagered that either the Fed would be unable to tighten at even a gradual pace, or that if it did hike it would only hasten the arrival of recession and deflation.

In a marked turnaround, yields on 10-year Treasuries fell to 1.6330 percent US10YT=TWEB, from a top of 1.773, and back to lows last seen at the end of 2012 when the Fed was busily printing money. Futures TYc1 imply further price gains lie ahead.

As a result, the spread over two-year paper US2YT=TWEB shrank to just 96 basis points, the smallest gap since late 2007 just before the global financial crisis hit.

Likewise, Fed fund futures <0#FF:> are pricing in the shallowest of shallow tightening paths. The market implies a rate of 45 basis points for the end of this year, 60 basis points at the end of 2017 and 90 by the close of 2018.

The decline in U.S. yields continued to drag on the dollar, which reached lows last seen in October against a basket of currencies .DXY.

The yen was again lifted by safe-haven flows, as befits Japan's position as the world's largest creditor nation. The dollar sliced down to 111.36 yen to reach depths not delved since October 2014 at 110.99 JPY=EBS.

The euro also weakened against its Japanese peer, sliding to a 2-1/2 year low of 126.06 yen EURJPY=R. Against the greenback though, the euro drove as high as $1.1355, its highest in three months.

The aversion to risk helped lift gold XAU= as far as $1,217.00 an ounce, clearing stiff resistance around $1,200.

Oil prices, another recent source of market volatility, resumed their decline as U.S. crude CLc1 slid $1 to $26.37 a barrel, while Brent futures LCOc1 lost 48 cents to $30.37.

Source: www.entrepreneur.com

Wednesday, 10 February 2016

Asia stocks drop as bank concerns smoulder, yen stands tall

Asian stocks fell on Wednesday on growing concerns about the health of the world's banks, particularly in Europe, pushing investors into safer assets such as the yen, which stood near a 15-month high versus the dollar.

Spreadbetters expected the pessimism to carry over into Europe, forecasting a slightly lower open for Britain's FTSE .FTSE, Germany's DAX .GDAXI and France's CAC .FCHI.

S&P 500 e-mini futures ESc1 fell 0.4 percent, suggesting another weak start on Wall Street.

Japan's Nikkei .N225, which tumbled more than 5 percent Tuesday, suffered another bruising session and slid to a 16-month low.

The Nikkei was last down 4 percent with falling bank shares and a stronger yen continuing to take a toll on sentiment.

The adoption of negative interest rates by the Bank of Japan has provided no support, and the index has dropped more than 10 percent since the central bank's surprise easing on Jan. 29.

Australian stocks touched a 2-1/2-year trough and MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS fell 0.4 percent. The Chinese markets are closed this week for the Lunar New Year holidays.

RELATED COVERAGE
› Nikkei tumbles to lowest since October 2014 as bank concerns intensify
Equity markets were struck early in the week by worries about the health of the euro zone banking sector, with very accommodative monetary policy seen crimping bank profits and their ability to repay debt.

Trouble for equities has meant a boon for sovereign debt, with the Japanese government bond 10-year yield JP10YTN=JBTC dropping into the negative for the first time on Tuesday before pulling back to 0.010 percent.

The U.S. Treasury benchmark yield US10YT=RR stood near a one-year trough and the 10-year German bund yield DE10YT=RR was at its lowest in 10 months.

The yen and Swiss franc, often sought in times of financial market turmoil, have also received strong boosts this week.

The dollar traded at 114.60 yen JPY= after sinking to a 15-month low of 114.205 overnight. The greenback traded close to 0.9695 franc CHF=, a four-month low touched on Tuesday.

"Concerns about European banks are contributing to the risk off mood in markets. In addition, U.S. data this month has been weak and Fed officials appear to be toning down on rate hikes," said Shinichiro Kadota, chief FX strategist at Barclays in Japan.

The euro was flat at $1.1287 EUR= after scaling a four-month high of $1.1338 overnight on the dollar's broader weakness.

After a tumultuous start to the week, markets looked to Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen's congressional testimony later in the session for fresh cues on the policy outlook, which may provide some relief for markets.

While Yellen is expected to defend the Fed's first rate hike in a decade last year and likely insist that further increases remain on track, any signs of a departure from such a stance in the wake of global growth concerns could provide risk assets with a breather.

"The narrative that she faces is that the U.S. economy and asset markets are being sucked into the downdraft caused by oil, China, emerging markets, reserve manager and sovereign wealth fund asset selling, commodities, currency war, the strong dollar, weak European banks, weak Japanese banks, weak US banks and policy ineffectiveness...to name a few," wrote Steven Englander, global head of FX strategy at Citi.

In commodities, crude oil prices trimmed some of their sharp losses suffered overnight. U.S. crude CLc1 was up 2.1 percent at $28.53 a barrel. Crude sank nearly 6 percent on Tuesday after weak demand forecasts from the U.S. government and a rout in equities pressured prices. [O/R]

Spot gold XAU= fetched $1,191.36 an ounce, within reach of a 7-1/2-month peak of $1,200.60 struck on Monday on the back of risk aversion in the wider markets. [GOL/]

Source: www.reuters.com

Tuesday, 9 February 2016

NSE’s market capitalisation rises by N164 billion

Despite price losses that outweighed gains, equity transactions on the Nigerian Stock Exchange closed in an upbeat yesterday, as major highly capitalised stocks appreciated in price, causing market capitalisation increased by N164 billion.

Yesterday, 17 stocks appreciated in price, while 22 constituted the losers chart.

Specifically, Dangote Cement topped the gainers chart with 7.80 per cent to close at N134.00 per share. Unilever followed with 4.94 per cent to close at N31.84 per share. PZ Cussons gained 4.78 per cent to close at N21.90 per share. United Capital added 4.51 per cent to close at N1.39 per share. Cutis gained 4.35 per cent to close at N1.44 per share.

Unity Capital added 3.03 per cen6t to close at N0.68 per share. Oando garnered 2.37 per cent to close at N3.88 per share. UAC-Properties and Guaranty Trust Bank added 2.06 and 1.56 per cent to close at N5.46 and N16.24 per share.

First City Monument Bank gained 1.14 per cent to close at N0.89 per share. NPF Micro finance Bank gained 1.01 per cent to close at N1.00 per share.

However, Conoil led others on the losers ‘chart with 9.36 per cent to close at N20.25 per share while PharmDeko followed with 4.89 per cent to close at N2.14 per share. Tiger Brands lost 4.80 per cent to close at N1.19 per share. Neimeth and Sterling Bank dropped 4.65 and 4.47 percent to close at N0.84 and N1.71 per share.

Learn Africa lost 4.44 per cent to close at N0.86 per share. May&Baker shed 4.35 per cent to close at N0.88 per share. NEM and Okomuoill dropped 4.23 and 3.48 per cent to close at N0.68 and N27.99 per share. Livestock lost 3.08 per cent to close at N1.26 per share. Guinness shed 2.32 per cent to close at N1.26 per share.

Continental Reinsurance also shed 2.00 per cent to close at N0.98 per share.
Consequently, the All-share in rose by 475.23 points or 1.9 per cent from 23,501.87 recorded on Friday to 23,977.10 while market capitalisation rose by N164 billion from N8,082 trillion to N8,241 trillion.

The banking subsector dominated in volume terms with 40.9 million shares worth N142 million. Transactions in the sector was boosted by activities in the shares of United Bank for Africa and Access Bank with 15 million shares and 2.9 million units worth N43 million and 12 million.

In all, investors exchanged 190 million shares worth N1.7 billion in 2,748 deals, lower than a total of 554 million units valued at N4.3 billion that changed hands in 2,304 deals on Friday.

Source: Guardian Newspaper.

The Top Skills That Will Get You Hired

LinkedIn recently announced the hottest skills of 2015 which got people hired. LinkedIn found this data by analyzing all of the hiring and recruiting activity that occurred on its website in 2015.

Cloud and distributed computing

2015 was the year of cloud and it is no surprise to see that cloud and distributed computing is the most sought after skillset. It is expected that this trend will keep rising in 2016. Therefore, if you want to get hired fast, start learning skills like Hadoop, HBase and Hive.

Statistical analysis and data mining

I am pretty sure that everybody has seen at least 1 article about big data in 2015. Guess what? Big data is getting bigger and bigger everyday with so many posts, tweets, photos and video uploads. As a result, companies are dealing with more data than ever. In order to target the right customers and market them the right products, this data needs to be analyzed. Thus, companies need employees who know statistics and use tools like SPSS, SAS, KNIME, R Programming and etc.

Marketing campaign management/SEO and SEM marketing

Before the internet era, the biggest advertising tool was TV. Now, internet is widely used for advertising and it is much better than TV because internet ads can be measured easily. Companies can track their customers using cookies or different algorithms and show only the ads that they may get interested in. Obviously, someone needs to create these ads and manage their budgets. Thus, marketing campaign managers along with SEO and SEM marketers are responsible for designing, placing and managing these ads. If you want one of these jobs, you need to learn internet marketing tools like Google Adwords, Google Analytics and several email marketing programs.

Integration software development

Software programming skills will still be hot in 2016. Companies use many software programs and it is very hard to make sure all programs are compatible with each other. Sometimes, companies need to develop in-house software programs to join two systems together so that they can work in harmony. For this reason, most companies need integration software developers to mediate between two or more separate programs.

Mobile app development

An app exists for anything you can imagine. Still, companies are creating more and more apps for their customers. Creating these apps is not enough by itself. They need to be maintained, fixed and upgraded according to the changing technology. As a result, if you still want to learn how to develop apps, you are still not late!
Source: www.entrepreneur.com

10 Ways to Fund Your Small Business

During the life of most any business, the owner will need to seek out cash to help with its growth or to keep it going through a rough patch. So, planning how to fund a business is hardly a trivial or brief topic. Indeed, a thorough discussion would take much more space than we have here.

However, we can provide an overview we hope will help start you thinking about your business’ options.

First, there are two ways to externally fund a business: debt and equity. When debt is used, the investor receives a note for his or her cash. The note spells out the terms of repayment, including timing and interest. The benefit of using debt is that you retain ownership of your company. The downside is that you have an obligation to repay. If you fail to meet your commitment, the lender, under certain circumstances, can force the company into liquidation.

Then there's equity. An owner who uses equity to fund a business turns over an ownership stake to an investor in return for the latter's cash. The benefit is that there is no obligation to repay the investor. The downside is the owner has to give up a part of the ownership of his or her business. This can entail losing some control over the company.

There are many different sources of equity and debt funding. We’ll briefly consider several examples.

Equity
Bootstrapping -- The business funds itself. As the business grows, it throws off cash that enables further growth. We know a company that distributes and installs VoIP (voice communications) technology systems. The owner had approached us for an angel investment. After we looked at his books, sales funnel and business model, we turned him down. Instead, we suggested that the owner bootstrap his business. We reasoned that the sales in the pipeline would be sufficient for the growth he planned. He didn’t need outside cash, and we suggested he not sell part of his company.

Self-funding -- Many entrepreneurs fund their businesses themselves. They use savings or personal debt (such as a second mortgage or credit cards). Alternatively, they sell assets to generate cash (e.g., a second home or a boat) for the business.

Friends and family -- Obviously, friends and family can provide either equity or debt funding. While this may initially seem like a good source, be careful about selling part of your business to this group. Unfortunately, businesses fail. The loss of capital can then cause hurt feelings, ruin friendships and make for unpleasant family gatherings. Be sure that your investors know the true risks.

Angel investors -- These people are typically affluent individuals willing to invest in businesses. Increasingly, angel investors are forming investment groups to spread risk, and to pool research. We belong to a couple of these groups. Search online for local angels or talk to your chamber of commerce. Your local chamber may know who is interested in funding new ventures and ideas in your area.

Cloud funding – There are a number of groups that will allow you to pitch your ideas to investors via the internet. Typically, when this type of funding is successful, multiple investors will contribute funds to the idea. Be aware that there are restrictions on how cloud funders can operate.

Partners -- Taking on a partner can be a source of funding. The partner may or may not become an employee of the business. Strategic partners can benefit the business by aligning resources. For example, a property management company might make a strategic investment in a property maintenance company because it could eventually feed work to the maintenance group.

Venture capital -- These firms provide early-stage funding, but are typically looking to make relatively large investments and take a significant share of the company -- often a controlling interest.

Crowdfunding – These are primarily web-based projects and allow individuals with a business, idea or project to reach out to thousands of potential investors through various platforms. Investments can be debt, equity or rewards-based. There are hundreds of crowdfunding platforms, so you will need to do your homework before launching into this arena.

Debt
Small business lenders -- Many organizations are interested in lending to small businesses. Try Googling “small business loans” to see the plethora of results. Most lenders will want the loan to be secured by assets of some type, and rates may be high. An owner spoke to us about a short-term loan he was considering. He said the rate was 3 percent. However, the term was 30 days. We had to explain to him that the annual interest rate for the loan was actually 36 percent, because the calculation was actually: 3 percent/per month X 12 months/per year = 36 percent/per year. This was quite different from the 3 percent he had assumed.

SBA loans – The Small Business Administration has many programs, but in general, these loans require a guarantee that the loan will be repaid, to enable businesses to get loans from traditional lenders.

Banks – Traditional banks make small business loans. However, they typically require a track record and will often want the loans secured with assets.

There are more options for funding small businesses than we can cover here. However, with a good business plan and much persistence, funding can be secured.

Source: www.entrepreneur.com

Wall St. turns positive after weak start as tech rebounds

Wall Street eked out small gains in early trading on Tuesday, easing off a lower opening, as a drop in energy and financial stocks was offset by a rebound in the technology sector.

Six of the 10 major S&P sectors were lower, led by a 0.9 percent rise in the technology sector .SPLRCT.

Facebook (FB.O) and Alphabet (GOOGL.O) were both up about 2 percent. Microsoft (MSFT.O) was up 1.2 percent. The stocks, all of which fell heavily in the past two days, were giving the biggest boost to the S&P and the Nasdaq.

U.S. stocks have taken a beating for the better part of this year on increasing concerns of a sustained slowdown in global economic growth and falling oil prices.

Global markets were also lower on Tuesday, again led by a fall in European bank stocks.

"The general thematic continues to be the European banking situation that has unhinged the risk market and slowly crept into the credit markets," said Chad Morganlander, portfolio manager at Stifel, Nicolaus & Co in Florham Park, New Jersey.

At 10:06 a.m. ET the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was down 16.75 points, or 0.1 percent, at 16,010.3.

The S&P 500 .SPX was up 2.71 points, or 0.15 percent, at 1,856.15 and the Nasdaq Composite index .IXIC was up 28.98 points, or 0.68 percent, at 4,312.73.

The energy sector .SPNY was the biggest decliner among the 10 S&P sectors as crude oil prices gave up early gains.

The financial sector .SPSY has taken the biggest beating this year, falling 15 percent as recession fears compounded concern about their exposure to the energy sector and expectations that global interest rates are unlikely to rise quickly.

Viacom (VIAB.O) tumbled 11 percent to $37.16 after its revenue missed estimates.

Regeneron Pharma (REGN.O) fell 7.3 percent to $363.89 after it forecast slowing sales growth for its blockbuster eye drug.

Disney (DIS.N) and Tesla (TSLA.O) were off 3 percent ahead of their results due after the bell.

Source: www.reuters.com

Monday, 8 February 2016

Wall Street bleeds as financials, tech stocks sell off

Wall Street sank sharply on Monday as financial stocks sold off amid worries about interest rates and investors backed off from richly valued tech and consumer stocks amid persistent fears of a global slowdown.

The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 2.5 percent to its lowest since October 2014, weighed down by Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook, stocks that lent strength to the market last year.

All 10 major S&P sectors were down, with the 3.15 percent fall in financial stocks .SPSY leading the decliners as they followed European banks lower.

U.S. crude oil prices eased from their session lows, but were still down 2.8 percent, while Brent was off 2 percent. Global stock markets have closely tracked the rise and fall in the price of the oversupplied commodity this year.

"Equities are in a 'go-nowhere-fast' mode, with a downward bias in the near term," said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis.

Investors have also been worried about the unraveling of rich valuations in a narrow group of stocks that led the market higher through most of 2015.

"What you've seen regarding technology and other sectors is that the (higher) valuations are being ratcheted back down closer to the underlying fundamentals that are going to support their growth, if its there," said Ryan Larson, head of U.S. equity trading at RBC Global Asset Management in Chicago.

At 13:04 p.m. ET (1804 GMT), the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was down 335.5 points, or 2.07 percent, at 15,869.47.

The S&P 500 .SPX was down 39.08 points, or 2.08 percent, at 1,840.97.

The Nasdaq Composite index .IXIC was down 113.75 points, or 2.61 percent, at 4,249.40. The index is on track for its worst two-day fall since August.

Gold XAU= prices rose to their highest since June and the yield on 30-year U.S. treasuries hit their lowest since April.

The CBOE volatility index .VIX, seen as a measure of Wall Street's fear, was up 14 percent, its biggest jump in a month.

Chesapeake Energy (CHK.N) tumbled 35 percent to $1.97 after sources told Reuters that the natgas company had tapped existing adviser Kirkland & Ellis to explore restructuring options. Chesapeake said it has no plans to pursue a bankruptcy.

Among financials, Goldman Sachs (GS.N) dropped 6.5 percent, set for its biggest drop in more than three years and weighing the most on the Dow.

The financials sector, down 15 percent for the year is the worst performing among the 10 major S&P sectors on increasing uncertainty about when the U.S. Federal Reserve will raise rates again.

Microsoft (MSFT.O), Amazon (AMZN.O), Alphabet (GOOGL.O) and Facebook (FB.O) were down between 2.5 percent and 5 percent.

Cognizant (CTSH.O) dropped 7 percent to $54.46 after the IT services provider issued a weak sales forecast.

Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by 2,630 to 429. On the Nasdaq, 2,140 issues fell and 586 rose.

The S&P 500 index showed five new 52-week highs and 82 lows, while the Nasdaq recorded two new highs and 419 lows.

Source: www.reuters.com

Asia stocks slip, Japan rebounds in holiday-thinned trade

Asian shares pared losses on Monday as a weaker yen helped Japan's Nikkei snap a four-day losing streak, but trade was thin with many regional markets closed for the Lunar New Year holiday.

Wall Street's losses on Friday curbed overall sentiment, though S&P 500 E-Mini futures ESc1 rose about 0.4 percent as investors focused on signs of strength in a mixed U.S. nonfarm payrolls report released late last week.

Financial spreadbetters predicted Britain's FTSE 100 .FTSE to open around 0.6 percent higher, and Germany's DAX .GDAXI and France's CAC 40 .FCHI to each open up about 0.4 percent.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS was down 0.1 percent, with Australian shares slipping a few points to end nearly flat.

But Japan's Nikkei .N225 erased early steep losses as the dollar gained on the yen, and ended up 1.1 percent.

With Singapore, Hong Kong and mainland China all closed for the new year holiday, volume was thin. China, a focus of recent market concern, will be closed for the entire week for the holiday.

Data released over the weekend showed China's foreign reserves fell for a third straight month in January, as the central bank dumped dollars to defend the yuan and prevent an increase in capital outflows.

Beijing has been struggling to underpin the yuan, which faces depreciation pressure as China's growth rate slows to its lowest levels in a quarter of a century.

"Just as China's persistent accumulation of foreign reserves in the first decade of the 21st century signalled that its managed currency was undervalued, its persistent loss of foreign reserves signals that the yuan has become overvalued by market criteria," economist Bill Adams at PNC Financial Services Group said in a research note.

"There is a large probability that China's central bank tires of spending its foreign reserves to defend an overvalued currency in the near future. The People's Bank of China will likely widen the currency's trading band and permit a larger managed slide against the dollar in coming months."

Also over the weekend, North Korea's launch of a long-range rocket drew international condemnation.

SOME STRENGTH IN US JOBS

On Wall Street, major U.S. indexes logged both daily and weekly drops. The Nasdaq Composite .IXIC led session losses, plunging 3.25 percent after a spate of disappointing forecasts from the technology sector.

Recently weak U.S. economic data has led investors to pare bets on a steady pace of interest rate increases by the Federal Reserve.

The U.S. nonfarm payrolls report on Friday showed an increase of just 151,000 jobs last month, falling well short of expectations for a rise of 190,000.

But the unemployment rate fell to 4.9 percent, the lowest since February 2008, and wages rose, indicating some signs of underlying strength in the labour market despite the weak headline figure.

Speculators slashed bullish bets on the U.S. dollar for a sixth straight week through Feb. 2, as net longs fell to their lowest level since roughly the third week of October, according to Reuters calculations and data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission released on Friday.

In currency markets, the dollar index .DXY, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major rivals, edged up 0.1 percent to 97.127, well above a nadir of 96.259 plumbed last Thursday, its lowest since October.

The dollar rose about 0.5 percent to 117.42 yen JPY=, moving away from Friday's 2-1/2 week low of 116.285. It slid 3.6 percent last week, its biggest weekly drop since July 2009.

"What we are seeing today is a correction after overwhelming selling in the dollar we saw last week. It is just unwinding of positions, not fresh bets against the yen," said Koichi Takamatsu, executive director of forex trading at Nomura Securities.

The euro edged down about 0.2 percent to $1.1137 EUR=, though it remained in sight of Friday's three-month high of $1.1250 scaled immediately after the headline figure of the payrolls data led investors to reduce their bets on further Fed rate hikes.

The Australian dollar AUD=D4 added 0.5 percent to $0.7094 after plunging nearly 2 percent against its U.S. counterpart on Friday.

Crude oil futures edged higher on hopes that big oil producers will take steps to address the global supply glut that has led to recent steep selloffs.

Saudi Arabia's oil minister Ali al-Naimi discussed cooperation between OPEC members and other oil producers to stabilise the global oil market with his Venezuelan counterpart on Sunday, according to state news agency SPA.

But nothing was decided, so caution kept gains in check. Brent crude LCOc1 added about 0.9 percent to $34.38 a barrel, while U.S. crude futures CLc1 also rose about 0.9 percent to $31.17.

Source: www.reuters.com