GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares gain on U.S. tech earnings, ECB purchase plans
* Wall Street higher on Apple (NasdaqGS: AAPL - news) , Texas Instruments (NasdaqGS: TXN - news) results
* European shares surge on report ECB to buy corporate bonds
* US Treasury prices, euro fall
* China GDP data weighs on Chinese shares
(Adds U.S. market open; changes byline, dateline; previous
LONDON)
By Sam Forgione
NEW YORK, Oct 21 (Reuters) - A measure of global equity
markets advanced on Tuesday after technology earnings lifted
U.S. shares and the prospect of European Central Bank corporate
bond purchases boosted European stocks and weighed on safe-haven
U.S. Treasuries prices.
A rally in shares of Apple Inc and Texas
Instruments Inc after stronger-than-expected quarterly
earnings reports lifted the tech-heavy Nasdaq index over 1
percent and helped put the S&P 500 on track for a fourth
straight session of gains, while European shares gained on a
Reuters report that the ECB was readying a plan to buy corporate
bonds.
The Dow's gains were limited, however, following
disappointing results from Coca-Cola. U.S. corporate
earnings season will ramp up this week, with nearly 130 S&P 500
companies scheduled to report.
"This was strong across all sectors, and Apple gave a good
guidance. Any fund manager who is underweight on Apple is
probably rethinking that position today," said Michael Binger,
senior portfolio manager at Minneapolis-based Gradient
Investments, which owns Apple stock.
U.S. data on Tuesday showed existing home sales rose 2.4
percent in September to an annual rate of 5.17 million units,
the strongest reading since September 2013.
The report that the ECB is considering buying corporate
bonds sparked a rally in the shares of peripheral European
countries and led the broader gains in European stocks. The news
also sent low-risk U.S. Treasuries prices lower and hurt the
euro.
"It increases the potential scale of the purchases the ECB
will be able to make if they extend out into the corporate bond
market," said Lee Hardman, a strategist with Bank of
Tokyo-Mitsubishi in London.
Official data showing China's gross domestic product grew
7.3 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, marking
the weakest growth since the first quarter of 2009, weighed on
Chinese shares and stoked concerns over global economic growth.
MSCI (NYSE: MSCI - news) 's all-country world index was last up 1
percent at 403.9, while the FTSEurofirst 300 index of
top European shares added 1.91 percent to 1,297.03.
The Dow Jones industrial average was up 0.61 percent
at 16,500.22, while the S&P 500 was up 1.25 percent at
1,927.81 and the Nasdaq Composite added 1.58 percent to
4,384.34.
The dollar index, which tracks the greenback versus a
basket of six currencies, rose 0.36 percent to 85.259. Benchmark
10-year U.S. Treasury notes were last down 7/32 to
yield 2.21 percent.
Brent crude was last up $0.11, or 0.14 percent, at
$85.51 a barrel. U.S. crude was last up $0.29, or 0.35
percent, at $83 per barrel.
(Additional reporting by Marc Jones and Patrick Graham in
London and Ryan Vlasetlica and Richard Leong in New York)