LONDON (Reuters) - European shares and the euro edged
higher on Tuesday on optimism that meetings on Greece's future and a
strategy being drawn up by the European Central Bank will lead to
progress in solving the euro zone debt crisis.
European shares (.FTEU3) , which have risen 16 percent since June, opened up 0.2 percent, with the main indexes in London (.FTSE) Paris (.FCHI) and Frankfurt (.GDAXI) safely in positive territory.
After modest rises in Asia and a flat finish on Wall
Street, the MSCI global share index <.MIWD00000PUS> was up 0.14
percent at 0715 GMT. (.EU) (.L) (.N) while the euro rose 0.15 percent
versus the dollar with smaller gains also against the yen and sterling.
"The dollar is weaker versus the euro ahead of the key
meetings this week that may provide clarity on both the immediate
outlook for Greece and the outlook in regard to the ECB's plan to buy
sovereign bonds," Derek Halpenny Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi.
"That optimism is persisting today."
Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras will meet German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and
Eurogroup chief Jean-Claude Juncker this week to try and secure more
funding from the European Union, International Monetary Fund and ECB,
despite falling behind on its debt cut targets.
Investors are also looking for any clues on the ECB's
plans for tackling the crisis after it poured cold water on a report
suggesting it was considering buying bonds of euro zone countries if
their borrowing costs breached a certain level.
Bond markets remained in a cautious mood ahead of an
auction of shorter-term 12-18 month debt by Spain, one of the countries
now at the centre of the euro zone crisis, later in the morning.
German government bonds, traditionally favored by risk
adverse investors, waned slightly in early trading but kept to its tight
recent range.
"We expect Spain to continue outperforming Italy
especially in the short end on continued expectations of...(the) EFSF
(bailout fund) and ECB support," RBS strategists said in a note.
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