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krisluke
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09-Aug-2011 19:54
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krisluke
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09-Aug-2011 19:52
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krisluke
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09-Aug-2011 19:48
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10 Things You Need To Know Before The Opening Bell |
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krisluke
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09-Aug-2011 19:45
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3 Quick Points From Goldman On Today's Fed MeetingSome quick points from Goldman's Sven Jari Stehn on today's FOMC:
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krisluke
Supreme |
09-Aug-2011 19:39
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European shares hit two-year low, Fed eyed for brake
* FTSEurofirst falls 1.7 pct
  * Oils down as crude prices drop   By Brian Gorman   LONDON, Aug 9 (Reuters) - European shares fell sharply On Tuesday, hitting a fresh two-year low on concern that major economies could fall back into recession and widespread scepticism over whether policymakers could stop the rot.   Stocks fell for the eighth consecutive trading day in high volume across the continent. Their drop followed steep losses in Asia, with Germany's DAX index down more than 6 percent at one point, before paring losses.   " It is just capitulation of market confidence and sentiment. There seems to be no stop to the selling, there is absolutely no confidence and no barrier to stem the flow of funds out of equities," said Angus Campbell, head of sales at Capital Spreads.   The FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was down 1.84 percent at 919.08 points, extending a decline to a two-year low of 888.11. The index is down more than 24 percent from its 2011 high of mid-Febraury, a move that is now big enough to qualify as bear market for equity market insiders.   U.S. stock index futures were mixed, down 0.2 percent to up 0.2 percent in volatile trade, after a global stock rout that has racked up losses of 20 percent and wiped trillions of dollars of the value of shares since early May.   Investors were looking to a U.S. Federal Reserve policy meeting later in the day for action that could brake the slide.   " Today, everything hinges on Bernanke and the Federal Reserve. He is under huge pressure to do something, some form of quantitative easing, and it will probably have to be big for it have any impact," said Jeremy Batstone-Carr, strategist at Charles Stanley.   In Europe, shares linked to economic growth -- oils and financial -- were among the biggest losers.   The STOXX Europe 600 Oil & Gas Index was down 2.6 percent, having dropped more than 4 percent earlier. Brent crude < LCOc1> was down nearly 2 percent on the demand outlook.   Royal Dutch Shell < RDSa.AS> fell 5.9 percent, and has lost more than 20 percent this month, hit further by problems with its operations in Nigeria.   The STOXX Europe 600 Banking Index fell 2.2 percent. Barclays lost 7 percent after chief executive Bob Diamond renewed speculation over the bank's future in the UK if the British government pushes ahead with sweeping reforms of the industry.   Investors have cut their exposure to risky assets such as stocks after a rapid deterioration in the 18-month-old euro zone debt crisis -- which led the European Central Bank to step in this week to buy Italian and Spanish bonds to stop the crisis spreading -- a cut in the U.S. credit rating and worries over the economic outlook.   Stock weakness reflected " a combination of markdowns to the global economic outlook, along with the uncomfortable realisation that global policy makers may have their hands tied in terms of providing further support," said Philippe Gijsels, head of research at BNP Paribas Fortis Global Markets in Brussels.   Volumes were more than 70 percent of the index's 90-day average by mid-morning.   Across Europe, Britain's FTSE 100 and France's CAC40 fell 2.1 and 1.3 percent respectively, pulling back from earlier steeper falls.   Analysts said the decline would offer some buying opportunities, and the index was in positive territory in the early part of the session, going as high as 951.44, but the rally was short-lived.   " The markets' fall (in previous sessions) implies huge falls in corporate earnings, which is over-egging the pudding. On one level, you could say markets have become oversold, and valuations are very attractive," Batstone-Carr said.   On Monday, the S& P 500 suffered its biggest fall since December 2008, falling 6 percent, after the United States lost its triple-A credit rating. (Additional reporting by Joanne Frearson and Atul Prakash) |
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krisluke
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09-Aug-2011 19:27
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Saudi keeps oil supply high despite price fall
By Dmitry Zhdannikov and Emma Farge
  LONDON (Reuters) - Leading OPEC producer Saudi Arabia has left supply to Asian and European customers unchanged in September despite a heavy fall in oil prices in the past week as global economic growth slows.   Industry sources and traders told Reuters the kingdom would supply the same volumes of crude to its customers in Asia and Europe under term contracts in September. Analysts said it was only a matter of time before Saudi had to cut production as demand for its oil slows.   " We are seeing the same volumes," said a major customer in Europe on condition of anonymity.   Two buyers in Asia said they received unchanged volumes.   " We are in line with our usual request," said a second big European customer. " This was decided when prices were higher so I don't think there will be any consequences in September."   Oil prices at just over $101 for Brent, down from nearly $120 just 10 days ago, are not far from levels where Riyadh may need to act.   Saudi Arabia's break-even budget price is $95 per barrel this year and $85 next year, according to Wall Street bank Merrill Lynch.   OPEC's June output hit its highest since the full onset of the financial crisis in October 2008, according to Reuters estimates , lifted by increased production from Saudi Arabia.   The kingdom ramped up output despite a failure to persuade fellow members to do the same at a meeting in early June and amid calls from industrialised nations to provide more barrels to help bring oil prices down and protect a fragile recovery.   Saudi Arabia is believed to have trimmed very little if any of its output in July despite being angered by a shock release of emergency stockpiles by the industrialised nations at the end of June.   Last month, the IEA, which advises 28 industrialised countries, decided against making a second release, saying extra supply from OPEC and the IEA reserves had made the market outlook more comfortable.   A source familiar with Saudi allocations said it should come as no surprise that allocations won't change in September.   " Everybody was debating if $120 was the right price for oil in the first place. Now the price is simply reflecting the world's supply and demand fundamentals more realistically," he said.   But analysts at Merrill Lynch said that like Saudi Arabia other key Middle East and OPEC producers now had much higher budgetary needs than in previous years, which could help them quickly find a compromise on output cuts.   " While many Middle East countries hold large foreign assets and could afford lower prices, we still believe that any pullback in Brent below $80 per barrel would trigger a substantial output reduction," Merrill said this week. |
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krisluke
Supreme |
09-Aug-2011 19:26
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Share rout sends world stocks down 20 pct since May
* World stocks fall 1 percent, recession fears grow
  * Federal Reserve meeting in focus   * Italian, Spanish yields fall, ECB buying again   * Gold posts further record high     By Jeremy Gaunt, European Investment Correspondent   LONDON, Aug 9 (Reuters) - World stocks sank sharply for a 10th session running on Tuesday, racking up a " bear market" 20 percent loss since early May, fuelled by fears of a new global downturn.   Stocks have shed nearly 17 percent since late July alone. Ten days of losses are extremely rare. The record is 13, back in the 1990s.   Gold hit another record high and the Swiss franc was in demand as money fled to whatever was seen as a safer harbour.   Focus was on a meeting of the U.S. Federal Reserve later in day, with investors likely to scour for hints about any new monetary stimulus programme with fears of a new global downturn growing.   Higher-than-expected inflation data from China added to investor concerns, with the United States slowing and its credit rating downgraded, and Europe reeling under a debt crisis.   There was some easing of the latter, however, with Italian and Spanish government bond yields falling and traders saying they were seeing more buying by the European Central Bank.   MSCI's all-country world index was down 1 percent, and has now shed 20 percent since peaking in May. The market rule of thumb is that a fall of that magnitude constitutes a " bear market" .   Emerging market stocks lost 3.5 percent and are down 17 percent for the year.   " Not even in the global financial crisis did we see this extraordinary volatility," said RBS Australia's head of Sydney sales trading, Justin Gallagher.   European bourses put in a short-lived attempted at gains at the open, but succumbed to the overall mood. The FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was down 2.2 percent, losing ground for the eighth session in a row and hitting a two-year low.   Some long-term investors, however, are starting to see opportunities in the rout.   BlackRock, a leading U.S. investment house, said it was going to use profits from its gold and bond portfolios to seek out stock bargains.     SAFETY FIRST   Gold posted another record high as investors sought some haven for their money. It was up about 3 percent at around $1,770 an ounce. It gained more than three percent on Monday.   " Markets are now worried about another global recession. Out of Europe, French bond yields have widened on expectations of sovereign debt downgrade because of the country's exposure to peripheral European debt," said Natalie Robertson, a commodities strategist at ANZ.   German business daily Handelsblatt quoted Moritz Kraemer, head of the European sovereign unit of Standard & Poor's as saying the rating outlook for Britain and France was stable and he did not expect to downgrade them within the next two years.   The dollar fell 2 percent on the day against the Swiss franc, extending losses to hit a record trough as the U.S. currency tumbled against currencies perceived to be safe havens.   It fell as low as 0.7359 Swiss franc, according to electronic trading platform EBS. In earlier trade, it fell nearly 1 percent on the day versus the yen to 76.99 yen.   The dollar was down half a percent against a basket of currencies .   Over time, analysts expect currencies with deeper liquidity to stay in favour in a predominantly risk-off environment.   " Liquidity matters in the current environment so the Swiss franc, the yen, the dollar and to some extent the euro will remain well supported, They are large and liquid and don't have the stretched positioning associated with carry currencies such as the Aussie, Kiwi and the Nordics," said Raghav Subbarao, currency strategist at Barclays Capital.   On bond markets, Italian and Spanish government yields fell. Italian 5-year government bond yields were 27 basis points lower at 4.3 percent, with 10-year yields 20 bps lower at 5.1 percent.   Spanish 10-year yields were 18 basis points lower at 5.02 percent. (Additional reporting by Neal Armstrong and Natsuko Waki, editing by Mike Peacock) |
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krisluke
Supreme |
09-Aug-2011 19:24
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Recession fears hit oil, lift gold to records
* Gold hits string of records, touches $1,778
  * Brent crude sinks below $100, pares losses   * Copper hits 8-month low, bounces on consumer buying   * China inflation hits 3-year high at 6.5 pct (Adds more quotes, details, updates prices)   By Eric Onstad and Manolo Serapio Jr   LONDON/SINGAPORE, Aug 9 (Reuters) - Most commodities deepened losses and gold added to its string of record peaks on Tuesday in volatile markets as investors kept liquidating risky assets on growing fears of a global recession.   Brent crude oil clawed back from a six-month low in Asian trading to briefly burst into positive territory before sinking back into the red, while copper pulled away from an eight-month low as some bargain hunters prowled the markets.   The downgrade of the United States' credit rating on Friday, along with a raging debt crisis in Europe, triggered a sell-off that has knocked nearly 10 percent off the price of U.S. crude in just two days and sent other commodities tumbling.   Some analysts expect commodities to keep sliding in a rout of inter-linked markets that saw world stocks sink for a 10th session, losing 20 percent since peaking in May, and the dollar shed another 1 percent against the yen.   " The market was clearly very extended, everybody was long in the same sort of risk trades and they were all cross-correlated. People traded the commodity currencies against copper against Chinese banks against junk bonds and so on," said Sean Corrigan, chief investment strategist at Diapason Commodities Management in Switzerland.   " How much further we go I don't know but I think the chances are that, whereas we spent nine to 10 months of buying dips, now we're possibly in a game where we sell rallies for a while."   Even if the U.S. Federal Reserve hints at more stimulus at a meeting later in the day, markets are likely to be wary after two rounds of monetary easing have failed to address underlying problems, Corrigan added.   Investors have been counting on China's economic strength to support commodity demand when the Western world is on shaky ground. But data on Tuesday showing China's inflation, speeding to a higher-than-forecast 6.5 percent in July, suggests Beijing may have limited room to stimulate domestic growth.   " It's crucial for commodity markets that China doesn't slide. Fears of a China slowdown would really take the wind out of the markets," said Citigroup analyst David Thurtell.     GOLD ROARS AHEAD   The one bright spot was gold, which staged its biggest three-day rally since late 2008 during the global financial crisis.   Spot gold hit a record $1,778.30 an ounce as investors sought refuge in the safe haven asset from chaos in other markets. That marked its 12th record in 20 sessions.   " The market could come off from here, but it's headed in a northerly direction," said ANZ head of metal sales Peter Hillyard. " From where we are now, you might think we could see some sort of pull-back. But I'm talking about a momentary thing, a pull-back like the loading of a gun, which then fires away."   The increasing gloom about sluggish global growth and the impact on commodities demand pushed Brent crude briefly below the $100 per barrel level.   " The underlying fundamental is that demand in Europe and the U.S. is not strong, we have a sell off in equities and confidence in the global recovery has been hit again," said Olivier Jakob, analyst at Petromatrix in Zug, Switzerland.   Brent crude < LCOc1> fell as much as $5 to $98.74 a barrel, the lowest intraday price since Feb. 8 and recovered to $102.90 by 1050 GMT, still nearly $25 off an April peak above $127.   U.S. crude < CLc1> plunged nearly 7 percent to $75.71, its lowest since September 2010 before also paring losses. U.S. crude's discount to Brent < CL-LCO1=R> rose to its highest ever, reaching a peak of $23.76.   Industrial metals fared slightly better, as copper bounced from eight-month lows and nudged into positive territory, bolstered by consumer buying.   Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange rebounded from $8,446.25, a fall of 4.7 percent, its lowest level since early December 2010, and gained 0.3 percent.   Aluminium rose 1.1 percent to $2,412 a tonne and nickel added nearly 1 percent to $21,430.   " Regardless where you are, some of these commodities do represent a reasonable value," said Jonathan Barratt, managing director of Sydney-based Commodity Broking Services.   In agricultural markets, U.S. soy dropped to its lowest since mid-March while corn fell to a one-week low and wheat hovered near a one-month low.   Sugar and coffee futures also were weighed down by recession fears, but cocoa bucked the trend and consolidated above a nine-week low touched on Friday. (Additional reporting by Amanda Cooper, Harpreet Bhal, Simon Falush, Naveen Thukral, Lewa Pardomuan Editing by Anthony Barker) |
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hpong5
Master |
07-Aug-2011 11:31
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Yup. The C Theory.
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Joe2020
Veteran |
07-Aug-2011 11:25
Yells: "I am the Oracle sent forth unto you that ye shall be warned" |
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If the criteria used now is to be applied consistently, they could have d/graded US long long ago even during Clinton's time. Why not during the 2 Bushes time? Well, its Obama. That was why he was elected in the first place. To take all the blame for all the white presidents have done.And the good guy will emerge in 2012 election as Captain America who save America from collapsing. And he is obviously a White man.
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hpong5
Master |
07-Aug-2011 10:20
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There's more than meets the eyes in this downgrade for obvious reasons.
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krisluke
Supreme |
07-Aug-2011 00:27
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Washington Reacts To The Downgrade |
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krisluke
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07-Aug-2011 00:22
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US dollar could weaken as Fed meeting looms
* Fed meeting, assessment of economy will be key focus
  * Swiss franc, yen stay in favor on economic worries   * Investors on alert for more currency intervention   (Recasts add comment, updates prices)   By Wanfeng Zhou   NEW YORK, Aug 5 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar could fall next week, especially against the Swiss franc and Japanese yen, as investors look to a Federal Reserve meeting for hints of further easing as worries about the global economy grow.   Stocks sold off and safe-haven assets, like the Swiss franc, soared this week after weak data fueled fears the world economy is slipping back into a recession. That sentiment persisted even after data Friday showed U.S. job growth accelerated more than expected last month.   The Swiss franc climbed to record highs against the dollar and euro on Friday, before easing back. The dollar last traded up 0.2 percent at 0.7665 franc < CHF=EBS> , while the euro rose 1.5 percent at 1.0960 francs < EURCHF=EBS> .   For the week, the dollar lost about 3.0 percent against the Swiss currency and the euro dropped 3.7 percent.   Against the yen < JPY=> , the dollar was last at 78.49, down 0.7 percent on the day, but rose 1.2 percent on the week after Japan intervened and eased monetary policy to weaken the yen.   Sharp moves in financial markets and the spike in volatility prompted aggressive policy actions by several major central banks in recent days, including a surprise interest rate cut by Switzerland, yen-selling intervention by Japan, and a resumption of bond buying by the European Central Bank.   " With markets already on the defensive and the macroeconomic picture deteriorating, (Fed Chairman Ben) Bernanke cannot afford to be tight-lipped about further quantitative easing," said Ashraf Laidi, CEO of Intermarket Strategy Ltd. in London.   " They have to continue signaling their readiness to introduce further measures, regardless of the Fed's opinion about the cost-benefit analysis of further quantitative easing," he added.   The U.S. Federal Open Market Committee, the Fed's policy-setting panel, is slated to announce its decision on interest rates at 2:15 p.m. EDT (1815 GMT) on Tuesday.   With no change in rates expected, investors will scrutinize the accompanying statement for the central bank's assessment on the economy and the outlook for monetary policy.   Any hints that the Fed could introduce news measures to stimulate a slowing economy could further erode the dollar's traditional role as a safe haven, driving investors to the Swiss franc and Japanese yen.   " Even if the Fed doesn't talk about QE3 next week, the market is going to continue to leave it as a possibility," said David Watt, senior currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto. " The only thing can turn the U.S. dollar trend is we start seeing a string of upward surprises in U.S. economic data."   INTERVENTION WATCH   Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda said he was closely watching yen moves on Friday, signaling a readiness to continue selling the currency. For details, see [ID:nL3E7J467X]   " There is a good likelihood they will intervene again as they will want to make it clear to the markets that they will not be tested and they were not one-off interventions," said Andrew Cox, currency strategist at Citigroup in New York.   But with worries about a global economic slowdown, analysts doubted actions by central banks will spark a trend reversal.   The euro last traded up 1.3 at $1.4290 < EUR=EBS> but was down slightly on the week. It got a boost after Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi pledged on Friday to speed up austerity measures and bring the country's budget into balance by 2013. [ID:nR1E7IF02F]   Sources told Reuters the European Central Bank had demanded such measures in exchange for buying bonds to ease the pressure on Italy, which has come under market attack.   But Andrew Busch, senior currency strategist at BMO Capital Markets, said any positive sentiment would fade.   " Seriously, can the markets or the ECB trust Italian PM Berlusconi to put through reforms?" he said. " Remember, the Europeans have yet to implement their last rescue scheme for Greece and the ratings agencies are still likely to downgrade Italy and Spain." |
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krisluke
Supreme |
07-Aug-2011 00:21
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Wall St Week Ahead: Investors struggle to see past panic
* S& P posts largest weekly percentage drop since Nov 2008 * Fed seen with few options for Aug. 9 FOMC meeting * Italy pledges austerity, equity markets bounce back * Downgrade of USA from S& P may unnerve investors (Updates with S& P downgrade of U.S. triple-A credit rating)
  By Rodrigo Campos   NEW YORK, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Wall Street hit the panic button this week and survived. But the shocks have left investors stranded.   Following its worst week in almost three years, the S& P 500 has fallen into correction territory and year-end forecasts are already being lowered. Safe havens like gold and the Swiss franc rallied.   Economic growth has slowed and budget-cutting legislation recently passed in the U.S. Congress could further dampen economic activity.   That leaves the path uncertain. So what are investors to expect in the weeks ahead?   " In a word, volatility," Citigroup strategist Jamie Searle said.   The CBOE Volatility Index, the market's gauge of anxiety, had its largest daily percentage spike since early 2007 on Thursday.   Another source of worry was thrown into the mix late Friday, when Standard & Poor's stripped the United States of its top-notch triple-A credit rating. In its report, S& P sounded pessimistic that U.S. lawmakers could reach the consensus needed to rein in deficits that were responsible for this ratings cut. " The long-term implications are daunting," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer of Harris Private Bank in Chicago.   " Short-term, Treasurys remain a premier safe-haven refuge."   Until June, equity investors could count on the Federal Reserve to keep pumping money into the system, boosting equity and commodity prices. The $600 billion the Fed used to buy assets in a second round of quantitative easing -- known as QE2 -- flooded markets with cash and helped lower interest rates. That's over now.   Following a political showdown in Congress that took the United States to the brink of a default and a bitter battle to rein in spending, few expect more fiscal stimulus. And additional action from the Fed is unlikely after its meeting this coming Tuesday.   " There is certainly not going to be any fiscal stimulus coming, given the debt situation we are in," said Paul Mendelssohn, chief investment strategist of Windham Financial Services in Charlotte, Vermont.   " You've got so much discord and so much dysfunctionality in Washington that (Fed Chairman Ben) Bernanke has to think twice before he does anything."   Fears of another recession have crept back, fed by flagging economic growth and a perceived inability of politicians on both sides of the Atlantic to deal with escalating government debt.   In Europe, a credit crisis that initially hit Ireland, Greece and Portugal escalated and now threatens to engulf Italy, the euro zone's third-largest economy. Bond yields soared this week to highs not seen in more than a decade, worrying investors about Rome's ability to finance -- and balance -- its budget.   During the afternoon of New York's Friday session, Italy pledged to speed up austerity measures and social reforms in return for European Central Bank help with funding.   PANIC BEGETS PANIC   Having fallen in nine of the last 10 sessions, the S& P 500 closed this week down 7.2 percent -- its biggest percentage drop since the third week of November 2008.   Selling was broad as average daily volume for the week soared to 11.6 billion shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, NYSE Amex and Nasdaq. That represents about a 55 percent jump from what was until last week the yearly average of nearly 7.5 billion.   Frantic moves in markets like the ones seen this week go beyond curbing investor confidence. Nervous consumers hold off on spending. Corporations don't sell their products and services so their earnings don't rise. Stock prices fall, creating a vicious circle.   " We're facing years of markets that will be at times scary and chaotic and that won't be providing the kinds of returns people want to expect from investments," said Rob Arnott, chairman of Research Affiliates in Newport Beach, California, who oversees $80 billion in assets.   " Most people think double digits in the past was not difficult so, 'I'm going to be conservative and expect 7 to 8 percent.' But that's not what the markets are priced to give you -- it's more like 3 to 5 percent," Arnott said.   Following downgrades to U.S. gross domestic product estimates and weak global figures on factory and services sector activity, hopes for a boom in the second half of the year have evaporated.   " I just don't think 3 percent GDP growth in the second half is anywhere close to realistic at this point,' said Keith Davis, bank analyst and principal at money manager Farr, Miller & Washington in Washington, DC.   " The third quarter is starting off pretty slow, and people are bringing down their numbers."   On Friday, Credit Suisse equity strategists cut their year-end estimate for the S& P 500 by 7 percent to 1,350 from 1450, with 1,400 as the target for year-end 2012.   Contrarian views are, nonetheless, ready to dismiss the panic and take it as a good time to jump back in.   " The biggest fear in our mind is: 'Is it a self-fulfilling prophecy? Is the market volatility causing people to really pull back?'" said Thomas Villalta, portfolio manager for Jones Villalta Asset Management in Austin, Texas.   " I think you'll see things kind of calm down over the weekend, and I suspect next week will be a better week for the market as people calm down and reassess the situation." (Wall St Week Ahead appears every Friday. Questions or comments on this column can be e-mailed to: rodrigo.campos(at)thomsonreuters.com) |
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krisluke
Supreme |
07-Aug-2011 00:18
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USA Downgraded, What Now‘This was an entirely predictable consequence of the mess that the Congress created a few weeks ago when they couldn’t agree on lifting the debt ceiling,’ British business secretary Vince Cable told Sky News. ‘But they have now agreed that, and the United States’ position is pretty secure.’ ‘What it tells us about the wider picture is that financial markets are now focusing on the credit worthiness of governments. Three years ago it was on the banks and the banks’ stability, and now it’s on government debt. ‘And that’s why the UK is in a fairly good position. The markets perceive that we have got a stable government… and we are getting on top of the deficit problem and we have got a very clear programme to deal with it.’ Turning to the euro zone debt crisis, which is currently threatening to engulf Italy and Spain, he added: ‘The euro zone countries have agreed a broadly sensible strategy to deal with the weakness of southern Europe.’ “The primary focus (of the rating review) remained on the current level of debt, the trajectory of debt as a share of the economy, and the lack of apparent willingness of elected officials as a group to deal with the U.S. medium-term fiscal outlook,” S& P said in the statement. “None of these key factors was meaningfully affected by the assumption revisions to the assumed growth of discretionary outlays, and thus had no impact on the rating decision.” S& P cut the long-term U.S. credit rating by one notch to AA-plus on concerns about the government’s budget deficits and rising debt burden. The decision could eventually raise borrowing costs for the American government, companies and consumers. “We take our responsibilities very seriously, and if at the end of our analysis the committee concludes that a rating isn’t where we believe it should be, it’s our duty to make that call,” David Beers told Reuters in an interview. S& P has been under a lot of fire from the Obama administration for basing its decision and analysis too much on the acrimonious debt-ceiling debate that led to an eleventh-hour agreement on Tuesday to avert a U.S. default. Beers, who is the head of sovereign ratings at S& P, acknowledged that the agency’s decision was highly influenced by a change in Washington’s “political dynamics” that hampered members of Congress from reaching a more comprehensive plan to cut the deficit. “From the standpoint of fiscal policy, the process has weakened and became less predictable than it was,” he said. “That’s the story around the difficulty highlighted in the debt-ceiling debate, cobbling together some type of fiscal policy choices.” Asked about news reports that there had been a back and forth between the agency and the government during the past 24 hours over the justification of the decision, S& P spokesman John Piecuch said the agency always gives a debt issuer the opportunity to review the announcement before it is made. “They can go through it and look for numbers, look for calculations — that is what happened,” Piecuch said. Given the size of the US economy and the pre-eminent role of the dollar worldwide, the cut to Washington’s credit rating ought to spill over throughout the global economy. But for the same reason – that the dollar and US debt are so widely held and relied on in finance and trade – many analysts think the impact will not be too heavy, at least in the short run. Standard & Poor’s cut the US’s top-rank triple-A rating down a notch, to AA+, for the first time ever on Friday, technically signalling that the country’s reliability for paying its debts had decreased. S& P rejected Washington’s efforts to demonstrate it had embarked on a clear path to slash the country’s deficit and reduce its debt load. The debt burden topped US$14.6 trillion (S$17.7 trillion) this week, 100 per cent of GDP, virtually the same ratio as Italy, whose debt has been dumped in markets over rising default fears. Meanwhile the government continues to borrow some 40 cents for every dollar it spends, while the economy is barely growing and unable to generate the revenues needed to support its fiscal path. The consequences of a downgrade are difficult to predict. Japan, cut twice in the past decade to stand at AA now, has a debt-to-GDP burden over more than 200 per cent, but continues to pay extremely low rates to borrow. Goldman Sachs warned last month in a study that the consequences of a downgrade were not easily foreseen. Theoretically, the ratings cut should at least raise the borrowing costs of the government, to rates higher than AAA countries like Germany, and serve as a warning to get its fiscal house in order. Moreover, it should push down the dollar’s value relative to other currencies from strong economies. And because the dollar and Treasuries are so crucial – China alone holds more than US$1.1 trillion worth of US debt and Japan, US$900 billion – any questioning of Washington’s ability to pay its debts should unnerve the global financial system. China’s Reaction ‘has every right’ to demand the United States address its debt problem following its downgrade by Standard and Poor’s, the official Xinhua news agency said on Saturday. Standard & Poor’s has cut the US rating a notch from the top flight triple-A to AA+, saying its politicians were becoming less able to get to grips with the country’s huge fiscal deficit and debt load. In a stinging commentary, Xinhua said Washington needed to ‘come to terms with the painful fact that the good old days when it could just borrow its way out of messes of its own making are finally gone’. S& P gave a negative outlook for the US, saying there was a chance its rating could be cut again within two years if progress is not made cutting the government budget gap. Xinhua said that unless Washington made substantial cuts to what it called the ‘US gigantic military expenditure and bloated social welfare costs’, the downgrade would simply be a ‘prelude to more devastating credit rating cuts’. ‘China, the largest creditor of the world’s sole superpower, has every right now to demand the United States to address its structural debt problems and ensure the safety of China’s dollar assets,’ the English-language commentary said. ‘To cure its addiction to debts, the United States has to re-establish the common sense principle that one should live within its means.’ The commentary also hit out at ’short-sighted political wrangling’, saying Washington had allowed domestic electoral politics to take the global economy hostage. |
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krisluke
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07-Aug-2011 00:16
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Gold resumes rise on economic fears, Fed meeting eyed
A graph with gold bars in the foreground
  NEW YORK (Reuters) - Gold resumed its rally on Friday as an unexpectedly upbeat U.S. payrolls report and glimmers of hope for an end to the euro zone debt crisis failed to entice investors back toward riskier assets.   Gold was briefly hit on Thursday with a bout of liquidation by traders scrambling to raise cash to meet margin calls in battered stock markets, but by Friday it had found its footing again as investors bet that nothing short of further government intervention would stave off deepening woes.   The possibility of more Japanese yen intervention, European bond buying and even a third round of U.S. quantitative easing left investors with few options besides gold, some traders said. Bullion is up 12 percent after five weeks of gains.   " They just don't know what the next shoe to drop is," said Bruce Dunn, vice president of trading at bullion dealer Auramet. " Other than piling into the Swiss franc, yen and Treasuries, there is really nothing else to invest, so that's why everybody is piling into gold."   Spot gold was up 0.8 percent at $1,661.09 an ounce by 3:55 PM EDT, after it hit a record high of $1,681.67 early on Thursday.   U.S. December gold futures settled down $7.20 at $1,651.80 an ounce. Futures volume topped 200,000 lots for a third straight day as investors sought safe havens.   Data released by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed managed money in gold futures and options raised their net length to a five-year high in the week up to August 2.   Silver fell 1.6 percent to $38.20 an ounce.   Gold benefited from a surge in volatility among U.S. stocks Friday. The S& P lost 10 percent in the last 10 sessions on intense fears the U.S. and euro zone economy are tipping back into recession.   The inverse 25-day correlation log coefficient between gold and the S& P 500 tightened to a 0.7, its strongest level in eight years.   Bullion firmed after sources close to the matter told Reuters the European Central Bank is ready to buy Italian and Spanish bonds if key structural reforms are brought forward by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.   The news came a day after the ECB resumed buying government bonds, marking a fresh round of central bank money easing.   Independent investor Dennis Gartman, however, said a bearish technical reversal and market preference for cash over riskier assets had prompted him to cut his gold positions by half.   RECESSION FEARS REMAIN, FOMC EYED   Gold mostly held in positive territory even after U.S. government data showed the economy generated 117,000 jobs last month and unemployment fell to 9.1 percent. However, the dip in the jobless rate reflected more of a contraction in the size of the work force than an improved employment picture.   The employment data eased pressure on the U.S. Federal Reserve to take new action to boost growth after a string of lackluster economic data this week.   " Gold is reacting to a gloomy economic outlook and the expected responses by governments, as it is very plausible to expect that governments will keep printing paper money," said James Dailey, portfolio manager of TEAM Financial Asset Management, which oversees $200 million in assets.   Platinum was down 0.2 percent at $1,714.49 an ounce, and palladium inched down 0.4 percent to $738.18 an ounce. |
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iPunter
Supreme |
04-Aug-2011 21:00
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Those who shorted at today's rally         peaks will be " shiork" tomorrow...                 But in case it is a wrong decision,                       one simply get out without any fuss... |
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krisluke
Supreme |
04-Aug-2011 20:59
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10 Things You Need To Know This Morning |
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krisluke
Supreme |
04-Aug-2011 20:57
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tanglinboy
Elite |
02-Aug-2011 07:18
Yells: "hello!" |
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Dow is down again !!! | ||||
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