By Patrick Graham
LONDON (Reuters) - Falls in iPhone and U.S. car sales helped beat European stock markets back from 20-month highs on Wednesday while the dollar inched up as investors priced in a greater chance of further tightening of U.S. monetary policy next month.
Falls in the price of copper
The surprise fall in Apple's iPhone sales in the first quarter and drops in units sold by Ford (N:F) and General Motors (N:GM) added to nerves about the durability of U.S. growth after a batch of shakier economic data last month.
"These numbers point to U.S. consumers becoming more cautious and do seem like a source of some of the weakness today," said Andy Sullivan, a portfolio manager with GL Asset Management UK in London. "Autos, tech and basic resources are leading Europe lower."
By 1134 GMT, the STOXX 600 (STOXX) index of leading European shares was down 0.15 percent. France's CAC 40 (FCHI) and Germany's DAX (GDAXI) fell 0.25 and 0.1 percent respectively while the resource-heavy FTSE 100 (FTSE) dipped 0.3 percent.
After a mixed Asian session, with a number of major markets closed, the MSCI global share index was marginally lower on the day. (MIWD00000PUS). U.S. futures dipped by 0.1-0.2 percent (1YMc1) (NQc1).
Since December, the U.S. Federal Reserve has finally begun to deliver on long-disappointed expectations of a steady rise in borrowing costs and an increase in official rates in June is now 65 percent priced in by markets, according to Reuters data.
But economic numbers in the past month have been less convincing, and the latest gains for global share prices look as much the product of an improving recovery in Europe as the U.S.-based optimism that dominated the end of last year.
That raises the question, ahead of the Fed's May policy decision later on Wednesday, of how much the world's largest economy is capable of stomaching tighter monetary conditions without a boost from tax cuts or new public spending.
Satoshi Okagawa, senior global markets analyst for Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation in Singapore, said the weak U.S. auto sales could make market participants wary of actively buying the dollar against the yen for now.
"Concerns about geopolitical risks such as North Korea had weighed on the dollar against the yen recently ... But the focus is shifting to whether the (strength) of U.S. economic fundamentals is for real," he said.
"There is more data coming up including the jobs data, so those need to be watched closely," he added, referring to the U.S. nonfarm payrolls report due on Friday.
The dollar index (DXY), which tracks the greenback against a basket of trade-weighted peers, rose 0.1 percent to 99.069.
It gained around 0.2 percent against the yen