By Anna Prior 
 

International companies trading in New York closed lower Thursday amid a batch of data on the U.S. economy that fell short of expectations and concerns that the Federal Reserve might slow down its stimulus efforts.

The Bank of New York index of ADRs fell 0.9% to 141.29.

Among a series of reports on the U.S. economy, initial claims for jobless benefits rose more than forecast last week, while claims for the prior week were revised higher by 5,000. Also on the data front, construction of new homes in the U.S. sank last month, with overall housing starts falling by 16.5%, against an anticipated decline of 6.4%.

Additionally, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President John Williams said he is open to trimming the central bank's bond-buying program in coming months if the economy continues to improve. The comments stoked fears of the Fed tapping the brakes on its stimulus efforts.

The European index lost 0.5% to 133.28.

Financial stocks contributed to the decline, with Spain's Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA (BBVA, BBVA.MC) falling 1.5% to $9.51, Germany's Deutsche Bank AG (DB, DBK.XE) down 1.6% to $46.66, and Switzerland's UBS AG (UBS, UBSN.VX) down 1.5% to $18.04.

Bucking the downward trend however were the U.K.'s Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC (RBS, RBS.LN) and Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LYG, LLOY.LN), which both posted gains. Britain's part state-owned banks continued their efforts to shed government support, as Lloyds forecast a return to profit this year and RBS said it would cut more jobs. RBS shares rose 3.3% to $9.71, while Lloyds shares climbed 2.2% to $3.72.

Shares of U.K. insurer Aviva PLC (AV, AV.LN) also rallied 6.4% to $10.55 after the company posted an 18% rise in the value of new business in the first quarter.

The Asian index shed 1.8% to 145.17.

ReneSola Ltd. (SOL) reported a slightly narrower first-quarter loss as the China-based solar-products maker reported stronger revenue and lower operating expenses. The company expects revenue above analysts' estimates for the current quarter. However, for the first quarter, the company's loss was still wider than expected. Shares fell 13% to $1.92.

Shares of Mumbai-based Tata Communications Ltd. (TCL, 500483.BY) fell a day after the company said it will apply to the U.S. markets regulator before the end of this month to delist its American Depositary Receipts from the New York Stock Exchange. Managing Director Vinod Kumar said the "ADR program had not developed the trading volumes or liquidity we had initially hoped when we listed." Shares fell 3.5% to $8.27.

The Latin American index dropped 0.5% to 319.77 and the emerging markets index fell 0.7% to 281.45.

Gold prices declined amid an industry report and disclosures of scaled-back bets by some hedge funds, which indicate investors' interest in the precious metal is ebbing. Shares of some South African gold miners closed lower, including Drdgold Ltd. (DRD, DRD.JO), which fell 1.5% to $6.00, and AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. (AU, ANG.JO), which fell 0.9% to $17.55.

Write to Anna Prior at anna.prior@dowjones.com

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