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			 Asian and European stocks continued a two-day decline for equity 
			markets worldwide, with Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 down 0.3 percent 
			and heading for its worst week of the year. [.EU] 
			 
			The slide of more than 3 percent is being compounded by this week's 
			jump in bond yields and a surge of more than 2 percent in the euro 
			to above $1.12, all of which are threatening to dampen the region's 
			recovery prospects. 
			 
			Benchmark German Bund yields kept on climbing, having posted their 
			biggest daily rise in two years on Wednesday on robust German 
			inflation and a pick-up in ECB bank lending figures. 
			 
			While inflation data for the euro zone showed the currency bloc 
			ended four months of deflation in April, with consumer prices 
			unchanged from year-ago levels, removing the threat of persistent 
			price declines as energy costs pushed higher, some cautioned that 
			the spectre of deflation was not entirely gone. 
			 
			"A flat print is far from a sufficient reason to pop the champagne 
			corks," RBC Capital Markets economist Timo del Carpio said in a note 
			to clients. "There are still real risks associated with a prolonged 
			period of low-but-positive inflation rates across the euro area." 
			
			  U.S. stock index futures were 0.2 percent lower, a day after data 
			showed that U.S. economic growth slowed to a crawl in the first 
			quarter, and ahead of earnings from Coca-Cola, ConocoPhillips and 
			Colgate-Palmolive. 
			 
			Jefferies' global equity strategist Sean Darby said markets were now 
			having to readjust fast to the changing fortunes of the U.S. and 
			Europe. 
			 
			"The U.S., the U.S. dollar and the U.S. economy were very heavily 
			consensus trades at the end of last year," he said. 
			 
			"Trades around that, for example weak oil price, strong dollar, weak 
			euro, have also been very consensus over the last couple months. 
			That easy money has probably played itself out ... There is a bit 
			more unwinding to go." 
			 
			The disappointing news on the world's biggest economy comes on top 
			of a worrying slowdown in China and persistent fears about Europe as 
			Greece scrambles to avoid bankruptcy. 
			 
			The Federal Reserve said on Wednesday that the dip in the U.S. 
			economy was probably due to "transitory" factors. But, combined with 
			concerns about the labour market, traders all but crossed June to 
			September from the list of possible start dates for Fed rate rises. 
			 
			Central banks and the cheap money they are pumping into the world's 
			still-wobbly economy remain the underlying theme for markets. 
			 
			
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			New Zealand's central bank became the latest to say it could cut 
			interest rates if domestic momentum weakened. 
			 
			Russia cut rates by one-and-a-half percentage points, having had to 
			jack them up last year following the slump in oil prices and the 
			Ukraine crisis. 
			 
			The rouble firmed after the central bank announcement, having been 
			down prior to the decision, as there had been speculation that the 
			bank would opt for a bigger rate cut. At 1047 GMT the rouble was at 
			51.23 against the dollar, still down 0.7 percent on the day. 
			[RUBUTSTN=MCX] 
			 
			U.S. crude oil hit a five-month high as the dollar slipped to its 
			lowest since February and as more evidence emerged of a gradual 
			balancing of the U.S. domestic market. 
			 
			OIL SURGE 
			 
			Europe's slide mirrored overnight moves in Asia. MSCI's broadest 
			index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 1.1 percent as South 
			Korean, Australian, Chinese and Hong Kong shares all suffered 
			losses. 
			 
			Japan's Nikkei slumped 2.6 percent, extending losses after the Bank 
			of Japan kept monetary policy unchanged. The decision was expected 
			but disappointed some participants who had bet it may ramp up its 
			already massive stimulus measures. 
			 
			"Risk has been building in the markets for weeks - the mass stock 
			market trading account openings in China, the rally in Europe as the 
			ECB ploughs on with its 65 billion euro a month QE programme," IG 
			market strategist Evan Lucas said. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Lionel Laurent; Editing by Louise Ireland 
			and Kevin Liffey) 
			
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
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