Monday, October 04, 2010

Quick Overview

  • U.S. factory orders fell by 0.5% in August

  • National Association of Realtors said its pending U.S. home sales index rose to 82.3 from 78.9 in July.

  • YoY September consumer confidence in Mexico rose to 91.6 from 81.9

  • Latvia's industrial output rose 20.5% YoY in September -- a nine-year high.

  • WoW US coal use fell 4%, but rose 2% YoY

  • Iraq's oil minister boosted the estimate of the country's proven oil reserves to 143.1 billion barrels-- up 25 %

  • YoY Russia’s annual inflation rate rose 7% after the country’s worst drought in at least half a century hobbled agricultural output.

  • Global steel demand growth will decelerate next year as China’s real estate market weakens and consumption in Japan falls, the World Steel Association said.

  • YoY the monetary base in Japan rose 5.8% in September

  • The head of the IMF Dominique Strauss-Kahn urged major economies to do more to prevent a global currency war.

  • The Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) of China's manufacturing sector rose to 53.8 % in September, up 2.1% from August

  • Despite investment plans to upgrade air cargo terminals at Nagpur, Mumbai and Delhi, lack of aircraft capacity in India and Bangladesh is threatening to roadblock demand expected to grow annually at 10% in the next five years according to the Airports Authority of India.

  • Dominic Dyer, chief executive of the Crop Protection Association, said "The U.K. is now only 58.9% self-sufficient food - the lowest figure for 42 years" .

  • UPS Freight, the less-than-truckload unit of UPS, said it will institute an average 5.9% general rate increase later this month.

  • Robert Edwards, the father of in vitro fertilisation, has received this year's Nobel prize.The

  • Economist online: Our voters think that Barack Obama's time in the White House so far has been good for business.

  • Arlan Suderman: Rumors that Russia is in to buy US corn following flat price break. Would be massively supportive if true..

  • Environmental campaigner and Green party activists Marina Silva, who was raised in the Amazon state of Acre and was illiterate until the age of 16, failed to make the second round but came away with 19% of the Brazilian vote, far higher than pollsters had expected.

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