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Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Quick Overview
- The U.S. Fed cut the federal funds rate from 1.50% to 1.00%, and the discount rate from 1.75% to 1.25%.
- U.S. durable goods orders rose 0.8% in September. Excluding transportation orders fell 1.1%.
- The U.S. Department of Energy said:
Supplies of crude oil rose 500,000 barrels
Supplies of gasoline fell 1.5 million barrels
Supplies of heating oil rose 400,000 barrels.
Refinery use increased last week from 84.8% to 85.3% of capacity.
Gasoline demand fell 3.4%YoY
Distillate demand fell 5.2% YoY.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Quick Overview
- The U.S. Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller index of home prices in 20 cities fell 1.0% in August and 16.6% YoY. YoY prices fell more than 30% in Las Vegas and Phoenix. Prices in Miami, San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego all fell more than 25%.
- The Conference Board's index of consumer confidence fell from 61.4 to a record low 38.0 in October.
- Iceland’s raised interest rates to 18% to prop up its frozen currency and markets.
- Because of a computer error the USDA issued new supply and demand estimates for 2008-2009 corn and soybeans.
Corn was reduced from 1.154 to 1.088 billion bushels.
Soybeans were reduced from 220 to 205 million bushels.
- Canada had 12.8 million hogs in inventory on October 1st, down 10.9% YoY.
- (Reuters) - Iraq's government denounced on Tuesday a U.S. air strike on a Syrian border village in an unexpected rebuke of Washington.
Monday, October 27, 2008
Sales of ships for scrap being 'suffocated'
"All the issues that will help the recovery are probably coming faster than people expect," Mr Soanes said.
"All the issues that will help the recovery are probably coming faster than people expect," Mr Soanes said.
IMF may need to "print money" as crisis spreads
"The IMF can in theory create liquidity like a central bank," said an informed source. "There are a lot of ideas kicking around."
Forecasters Race to Call the Bottom to the Market Even in normal times, forecasters have a strong incentive to make extreme predictions, which is why those “Dow 1,000!” reports persist. “It’s eye-popping. It’s relevant. It seems exciting,” Mr. Lamont said. Such predictions attract publicity, name recognition and a bigger client base in a business where investors pay thousands, if not millions, for stock advice and investment guidance.
Quick Overview
- U.S. new home sales were at an annual rate of 464,000 in September, up 2.7% MoM and down 36% YoY.
- South Korea cut its interest rate from 5.00% to 4.25%.
- Australia intervened on Friday and bought Australian dollars.
- Japan's retail sales fell 0.4% YoY
- The Group of Seven expressed concern about the soaring Japanese yen – are they next to intervene?
Farm-Credit Squeeze May Cut Crops, Spur Food Crisis (Update1)
(Bloomberg) -- The credit crunch is compounding a profit squeeze for farmers that may curb global harvests and worsen a food crisis for developing countries.
(Bloomberg) -- The credit crunch is compounding a profit squeeze for farmers that may curb global harvests and worsen a food crisis for developing countries.
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Europe on the brink of currency crisis meltdown
Experts fear the mayhem may soon trigger a chain reaction within the eurozone itself. The risk is a surge in capital flight from Austria – the country, as it happens, that set off the global banking collapse of May 1931 when Credit-Anstalt went down – and from a string of Club Med countries that rely on foreign funding to cover huge current account deficits.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Quick Overview
- The National Association of Realtors said existing home sales were at an annual rate of 5.18 million units, up 5.5% in September.
- U.K.'s GDP fell 0.5% in the third quarter.
- YoY Canada’s consumer prices rose 3.4%.
- YoY GDP in South Korea rose 3.9%
- OPEC wants to cut oil production by 1.5 million barrels a day
- The port of Rotterdam announced that throughput during the first nine months of the year rose by 6.1% YoY. Most types of cargo showed a positive trend, with agribulk up 26% YoY, liquid bulk up 16%, ores and scrap up 11%, coal up 9%, crude oil up 7%, containers up 6%.
- The IMF is aiding Iceland with about $2.1bn.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Tough to believe Greenspan's disbelief .."those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholder's equity (myself especially) are in a state of shocked disbelief."
Cue up Casablanca, and the "I'm shocked, shocked, to find gambling here," line from the Captain Renault character.
The truth is that the executives at financial institutions had very little interest in protecting shareholder's equity.
Cue up Casablanca, and the "I'm shocked, shocked, to find gambling here," line from the Captain Renault character.
The truth is that the executives at financial institutions had very little interest in protecting shareholder's equity.
GLG's Roman, NYU's Roubini Predict Hedge Fund Failures, Panic
Nouriel Roubini, the New York University Professor who spoke at the same conference, said hundreds of hedge funds will fail as the crisis forces investors to dump assets. ``We've reached a situation of sheer panic,'' said Roubini, who predicted the financial crisis in 2006. ``Don't be surprised if policy makers need to close down markets for a week or two in coming days.''
Quick Overview
- U.S. jobless claims were up 15,000 last week to 478,000, more than expected.
- New Zealand cut its interest rate from 7.5% to 6.5%
- Sweden cut its interest rate from 4.25% to 3.75%
- U.K.'s retail sales volume fell 0.4% in September.
- Industrial new orders in the Euro area fell 1.2% in August
- RealtyTrac said 765,558 foreclosure filings were made on U.S. properties in the third quarter of this year - up 3% from the second quarter and 71% YoY.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Greenspan Urges Tighter Regulation After `Breakdown' (Update1)
(Bloomberg) -- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan called for tighter regulation of financial companies, distancing himself from the free-market culture that he helped to create.
Credit-Rating Companies `Sold Our Soul' for Pay, Employees Said
(Bloomberg) -- Employees at Moody's Investors Service told executives that issuing dubious creditworthy ratings to mortgage-backed securities made it appear they were incompetent or ``sold our soul to the devil for revenue,'' according to e-mails obtained by U.S. House investigators.
Quick Overview
- Canada’s retail sales fell 0.3%. Excluding autos, retail sales rose 0.4%
Canada’s index of leading indicators fell 0.2% in September
- Australia's consumer prices rose 5.0%.
- New Zealand's central bank cut its benchmark interest rate by a record 1% to 6.5%
- The U.S. Department of Energy said:
Supplies of crude oil rose 3.2 million barrels to 311.4 million barrels
Supplies of gasoline rose 2.7 million barrels
Supplies of heating oil rose 800,000 barrels.
Refinery use increased from 82.2% to 84.8% of capacity
Gasoline demand fell 4.3% YoY
Distillate demand fell 5.8% YoY
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Don't make a drama out of this financial crisis
The scale of what has happened is breath-taking. The oil price has halved since July. Wheat prices have halved since spring. Rice prices are down by a third. Remember that early this year there were riots in many developing countries – not over the antics of Wall Street investment bankers but over the price of food. And in many countries, until recently anyway, the forces pushing towards recession have been more about the squeeze on real incomes than about the credit crunch. What will happen now is that, thanks to the fall in commodity prices, the squeeze will go into reverse, thereby handing purchasing power back to the consumers.
The scale of what has happened is breath-taking. The oil price has halved since July. Wheat prices have halved since spring. Rice prices are down by a third. Remember that early this year there were riots in many developing countries – not over the antics of Wall Street investment bankers but over the price of food. And in many countries, until recently anyway, the forces pushing towards recession have been more about the squeeze on real incomes than about the credit crunch. What will happen now is that, thanks to the fall in commodity prices, the squeeze will go into reverse, thereby handing purchasing power back to the consumers.
Spreading the wealth
And there is a lot of spreading potential: income distribution in America is the widest of the 30 countries of the OECD. The top 10% (or decile) of earners have an average $87,257 of disposable income, while those in the bottom decile have $5,819, among the very lowest of any country.
Quick Overview
- The Chicago Federal Reserve's index of national activity fell from -1.81 to -2.57 in September.
- Canada reduced its interest rate from 2.50% to 2.25%.
- (Bloomberg) -- Argentine bonds plunged, sending benchmark dollar yields over 24 percent, and stocks sank the most in a decade on speculation the government will nationalize pension funds in a bid to attain financing and stave off a second default this decade.
- Cash strapped Pakistan is looking for loans from the IMF and other bodies of up to $15 billion to avert a balance of payment crisis.
- China will raise tax rebates for a quarter of its exports and jumpstart infrastructure projects, trying to buffer the impact of weaker overseas demand.
- China intends to set up a soybean reserve of up to 1.5 million tonnes.
The United States, Europe and Bretton Woods II
The Europeans are not looking to challenge the reality of American power, they are looking to increase the degree to which the rest of the world can influence the dynamics of the American economy, with an eye toward limiting the ability of the Americans to accidentally destabilize the international financial system again.
The Europeans are not looking to challenge the reality of American power, they are looking to increase the degree to which the rest of the world can influence the dynamics of the American economy, with an eye toward limiting the ability of the Americans to accidentally destabilize the international financial system again.
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