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Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Quick Overview
- "Drought conditions in both the U.S. and China's winter wheat areas are a serious cause for concern and could be a key factor inhibiting the needed wheat supply recovery," said Macquarie.
- U.S. housing starts fell to 4.3 % to a 529,000 annual rate in December. Permits for new construction rose to an annualized rate of 635,000 in December - the highest level since last March.
- Long Beach terminals handled 6.3 million TEU in 2010, a 1.2 million TEU increase of 25 % YoY, the biggest annual leap since 1971 when the port leased the first container terminal.(DJ)
- China to cut food weighting in CPI composition.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Quick Overview
- The NY Fed index rose to 11.9 from a revised 9.9 in December.
- The National Association of Home Builders index flat at 16 for the third straight month.
- Sales at Japanese department stores dropped 1.5% YoY.
- Philippines extends zero tariff on wheat for 6 months.
- China's electricity consumption maintained its steady growth last year, up 14.56 % YoY.
(FT)The US Securities and Exchange Commission is facing a budget squeeze from the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Quick Overview
- The world refined copper market is expected to have a 500,000-metric-ton to 600,000-ton deficit in 2011, even with a significantly weaker demand scenario, according to JPMorgan Securities Ltd.
- (Bloomberg) -- India’s government may ban exports of wheat products, reduce taxes on milk powder and bar essential commodities from trading in futures markets as part of steps to slow gains in food inflation, the Economic Times reported.
- The USDA estimates the 2010 corn crop at 12.447 billion bushels on yield of 152.8 bushels per acre, down from its prev. estimate of 12.54 billion on a yield of 154.3 bushels per acre. This implies domestic ending stocks are at a 20.2 day supply -- the 2nd tightest in 50 years.
- The USDA estimates the 2010 Soybean crop at 3.329 billion bushels on yield of 43.5 bushels per acre, down 30 million from its previous estimate. This implies a 15.2-day supply -- the tightest in 40 years.
- The USDA has reduced the size of the 2010-11 Florida citrus crops by 3 million boxes to 140 million 90-pound boxes.
- China is to allow imports of Canadian seal meat and oils, Canada's fisheries minister says; hopeful new market access will restore a sealing industry battered by an EU seal products import ban.
- Australia's unemployment rate fell by 0.2 % to 5.0%.
- MoM Japanese core machinery orders fell 3.0%
- China raised reserve requirements by 50 basis points -- the fourth time in little more than two months.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Quick Overview
- Japan pledged to buy bonds backed by European governments.
- (MW) Speculation intensifies that Portugal will be forced to seek a bailout.
- Portugal does not need to apply for EU aid, Spain's Economy Minister said.
- One week after taking office, California Governor Jerry Brown announced a balanced state budget on Monday which slashes state spending by 12.5 billion U.S. dollars.
- A Fed. official said he would set the bar "very high" for the central bank to stop short in its planned $600 billion in bond purchases, but that the Fed may need to begin considering a reversal of policy by year end.
Monday, January 10, 2011
Quick Overview
- China's soybean imports will likely expand 5%-10% a year over the next five years, with imports in 2011 around 54 million-55 million tons, the Chinese Grain Network said
- Chinas exports grew 31.3% YoY to 1.58 trillion U.S. dollars while imports rose 38.7 % to 1.39 trillion U.S. dollars, said the GAC.
- Chinas December sales of passenger cars rose 26.7% YoY to just under 1.5 million units.
- Inflationary threats have become a 'general feature' among the world's emerging economies, Jean-Claude Trichet, European Central Bank president warns.
- Germany signaled it may agree to expand euro zone’s €750bn rescue facility.
- Australia's retail sales rose 0.3% in November
- (Sea Shepherd Conservation Society) Anti-whaling activists are promising more attacks after throwing smoke grenades and "flash bangs" at Japanese whalers in the Southern Ocean today.
- Perth Mint: Physical gold demand exceeds current availability
- Pima County Sheriff Clarence W. Dupnik: "To inflame the public on a daily basis, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, has impact on people, especially who are unbalanced personalities to begin with"
Saturday, January 08, 2011
Quick Overview
- U.S. Payrolls increased 103,000, less than the median projection of 150,000
- (Reuters) - Algeria is to suspend customs duties and value added tax on imports of white sugar until Aug. 31, the government announced on Saturday in response to a wave of riots over rising food prices
- High Plains Journal: The average value of an acre of farmland in Iowa increased 15.9% in 2010, according to an annual survey conducted by Iowa State University Extension. Mike Duffy, ISU Extension economist who conducts the survey, said the statewide average land value as of Nov. 1 this year was $5,064 an acre, up $693 per acre from 2009.
- The highest court in Massachusetts affirmed a lower court’s ruling invalidating two foreclosure sales because the banks did not prove that they actually owned the mortgages at the time of foreclosure.
Europe unveils sweeping plans to govern reckless banks
The plans allow oversight bodies to place a "permanent presence" of inspectors in the offices of suspect banks, adopting a scheme already pioneered by Spain’s central bank. There will be annual stress tests, geared to shocks of "low probability but high impact".
Regulators will be able to order bank boards to fire directors, desist from any activity, reduce leverage, sell off assets, or restructure debt.
In extreme cases, they will have pre-emptive powers to take over the entire bank and decapitate top management, perhaps when Tier I capital ratios fall below an fixed level. Stronger banks will be required to help cover the costs of failure by weaker peers, creating a further buffer between the financial industry and the taxpayer.
The plans allow oversight bodies to place a "permanent presence" of inspectors in the offices of suspect banks, adopting a scheme already pioneered by Spain’s central bank. There will be annual stress tests, geared to shocks of "low probability but high impact".
Regulators will be able to order bank boards to fire directors, desist from any activity, reduce leverage, sell off assets, or restructure debt.
In extreme cases, they will have pre-emptive powers to take over the entire bank and decapitate top management, perhaps when Tier I capital ratios fall below an fixed level. Stronger banks will be required to help cover the costs of failure by weaker peers, creating a further buffer between the financial industry and the taxpayer.
Thursday, January 06, 2011
Quick Overview
- Australian Bureau of Meteorology: The Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) value for December of +27 is the highest December SOI value on record, as well as being the highest value for any month since November 1973.
- U.S. jobless benefits climb 18,000 to 409,000 last week
- The Fed balance sheet rose to $2.418 trillion in the week ended Jan. 5 from $2.403 trillion the prior week.
- Britain raised the national sales tax to 20% from its previous 17.5 %, as part of its efforts to trim the near-record public spending deficit.
Wednesday, January 05, 2011
Quick Overview
- U.S. payrolls expanded by 297,000 in December as companies boosted payrolls by the most since records began in 2001.
- Record high food prices and the likelihood of further increases in the year ahead are raising the specter of a repeat of the food riots that broke out in 2007-08, a senior economist at the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization said Wednesday.
- U.S. crude oil inventories fell 4.16 million barrels to 335.3 million last week.
- China's 2010 corn output is estimated at 172 million metric tons, down 940,000 tons from the previous estimate.
- The US Department of Agriculture's Buenos Aires bureau lowered its estimate of Argentine corn production by 1.0m tonnes.
- the ISM index rose to 57.1% in December
- (Bloomberg) -- The Pentagon underestimated the speed at which China has developed and fielded a ballistic missile that may be capable of hitting a maneuvering U.S. aircraft carrier, the head of Navy intelligence said today.
Tuesday, January 04, 2011
Regulators Resist Volcker Wandering Warning of Too-Big-to-Fail
“I wouldn’t lend you a dime if I knew you loved to gamble at a casino,” said Kahn, the chairman of investment advisers Kahn Brothers Group Inc., in an interview..
..“I’m sorry,” Reed, 70, said in an interview. U.S. lawmakers were wrong in 1999 to repeal the Depression-era Glass- Steagall Act, he said. The act required the separation of institutions involved in capital markets from those engaged primarily in traditional customer services, such as taking deposits and making loans..
..“My greatest fear for the last year has been an economic collapse as bad as the Great Depression,” Miller said in an interview. “My second greatest fear was that the economy would stabilize and begin to recover and the financial industry would have the clout to defeat the fundamental reforms that our nation desperately needs. My greatest fear seems less likely, lately, but my second greatest fear seems more likely every day.”
“I wouldn’t lend you a dime if I knew you loved to gamble at a casino,” said Kahn, the chairman of investment advisers Kahn Brothers Group Inc., in an interview..
..“I’m sorry,” Reed, 70, said in an interview. U.S. lawmakers were wrong in 1999 to repeal the Depression-era Glass- Steagall Act, he said. The act required the separation of institutions involved in capital markets from those engaged primarily in traditional customer services, such as taking deposits and making loans..
..“My greatest fear for the last year has been an economic collapse as bad as the Great Depression,” Miller said in an interview. “My second greatest fear was that the economy would stabilize and begin to recover and the financial industry would have the clout to defeat the fundamental reforms that our nation desperately needs. My greatest fear seems less likely, lately, but my second greatest fear seems more likely every day.”
Quick Overview
- 12/20/10 China's soybean imports in November rose 47% compared with October and 90% YoY, to 5.48 million metric tons, the General Administration of Customs said Tuesday. Total imports from January to November increased 31% to 49.4 million tons.
- China November natural Rubber imports rose 53% vs 55% in October.
- China’s November Uranium imports at 2,181 tons rose 100% YoY.
- (Bloomberg) -- Uranium stocks, already trading at higher valuations than their national benchmark indexes, will rise further amid predictions the price of the fuel may surge as much as 30 percent, investors and analysts said.
- Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) -- One unidentified company has the potential to own at least 90 percent of the copper in warehouses monitored by the London Metal Exchange, the largest such position in two years, bourse data showed.
- Th People’s Bank of China increased key one-year lending and deposit rates by 25 basis points on Christmas Day in its second move since mid-October.
- "Inflation expectations are direr than inflation itself," Wen said, urging people to remain confident and government agencies to act to stabilize prices
- Sales of new single-family houses in the United States increased 5.5 percent in November.
- U.S. existing-home sales rose 5.6% MoM in November.
- French household consumption in manufactured goods rose by 2.8% in November.
- The IMF announced on Tuesday the conclusion of the limited sales program covering 403.3 metric tons of gold that was approved by the IMF in September 2009.
- Severe drought in major wheat production provinces of Henan, Hebei and Anhui has sparked supply concerns for 2011.
- 12/28/10 The S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city composite home-price index fell 1.3% MoM and 0.8% YoY. Including homes that are in or close to foreclosure, there’s inventory of 7.2 million homes, or roughly 21 months of supply
- U.S. consumer confidence fell to 52.5 in December from an upwardly revised 54.3 in November.
- U.S. retailers 2010 holiday sales rose 5.5 % for the best performance in five years.
- The Chicago purchasing manager’s index rose from 62.5 to 68.6, the highest level since the late 1980s and above expectations.
- 1/2/11 QoQ Singapore’s GDP rose 6.9% in the three months through Dec. 31.
- The Centre for Economics and Business Research said the likelihood the euro area will exist in its current structure in a decade is 20 % as governments take unsatisfactory measures to tackle economic imbalances.
- 1/4/10 GM on Tuesday reported a 7.5% increase in December U.S. sales -- Ford reported a 6.7% increase.
- U.S. factory orders rose 0.7% in November, ahead of forecasts for a 0.1% increase.
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Quick Overview
- (Bloomberg) Informa Economics Inc. said farmers will plant corn on 90.755 million acres, less than a November forecast of 93.055 million. Soybeans will be sown on 77.565 million, down from a record 77.714 million this year, the Memphis-based researcher said today in a report. Informa said farmers may plant the most acres of cotton in five years, after prices jumped to a record.
- U.S. Sugar Corp. said five nights of freezing Florida weather in the past 10 days “severely damaged” a cane crop.
- A shortage of high-quality arabica coffee has led to “precariousness of the supply/demand balance,” the ICO said.
- Ifo institute said its business climate index, rose to 109.9 from 109.
- Bank of America has halted all transactions for WikiLeaks, joining other institutions that refuse to process payments for the website that has exposed a trove of US government cables.
- Elwynn Taylor: The La Niña to date is tracking the 1973-4 event, a Risk factor for 2011
Friday, December 17, 2010
Mad Soybean’ Disease May Cut Some Brazil Output
(Bloomberg) -- Soybean farmers in Brazil, the world’s second-largest producer of the oilseed, are facing a new crop disease that threatens to curb yields in some areas by as much as 60 percent, a government researcher said
(Bloomberg) -- Soybean farmers in Brazil, the world’s second-largest producer of the oilseed, are facing a new crop disease that threatens to curb yields in some areas by as much as 60 percent, a government researcher said
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Quick Overview
- The Philadelphia Fed's manufacturing survey rose to 24.3 from 22.5 in November.
- Yields on 10-year notes have risen so far this month by about 72 basis points, making it one of the worst months in 20 years.
- U.S. housing starts rose 3.9% in November. Permits for new construction fell 4%.
- U.S. Jobless claims fell by 3,000 to a total of 420,000 in the latest week, the third decline in the past four weeks.
- TheU.S. current-account deficit widened to $127.2 billion in Q3 from $123.2 billion in Q2.
- Annual inflation in the euro zone remained stable at 1.9 % in November
- Rabobank said the U.S. may use as much as 5.1 billion bushels of corn to produce ethanol the grain-based gasoline additive in 2010-2011 -- eroding inventories. The extra ethanol consumption implied a corn stock to use ratio at less than 4%.
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Quick Overview
- U.S. consumer prices rose 0.1% in November
- (Guardian) Time’s poll found that almost six out 10 Americans believe Assange should face criminal charges for releasing the cables.
- U.S. industrial output rose 0.4%, the biggest gain since July.
- The DOE said:
- Crude oil supplies fell 9.85 million barrels to 346 million last week. Stockpiles were forecast to decrease by 2.5 million barrels.
- Gasoline supplies rose 809,000 barrels to 214.8 million.
- Refineries operated at 88% of capacity.
- Distillate supplies rose 1.09 million barrels to 161.3 million.
- (Bloomberg) Silver, the leading performer in metals this year, is likely to repeat its success in 2011, reaching $40 an ounce on new applications and industry demand, said the head of commodity trading in Japan at Standard Bank Plc.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Why I'm Posting Bail Money for Julian Assange By Michael Moore
Openness, transparency -- these are among the few weapons the citizenry has to protect itself from the powerful and the corrupt. What if within days of August 4th, 1964 -- after the Pentagon had made up the lie that our ship was attacked by the North Vietnamese in the Gulf of Tonkin -- there had been a WikiLeaks to tell the American people that the whole thing was made up? I guess 58,000 of our soldiers (and 2 million Vietnamese) might be alive today.
Openness, transparency -- these are among the few weapons the citizenry has to protect itself from the powerful and the corrupt. What if within days of August 4th, 1964 -- after the Pentagon had made up the lie that our ship was attacked by the North Vietnamese in the Gulf of Tonkin -- there had been a WikiLeaks to tell the American people that the whole thing was made up? I guess 58,000 of our soldiers (and 2 million Vietnamese) might be alive today.
Quick Overview
- U.S. retail sales rose 0.8% in November, marking fifth straight monthly increase
- U.S. PPI rose 0.8% in November -- the biggest gain since March.(prices for fresh fruits and melons rose 13.6%)
- U.K. CPI rose 3.3%
- The FT reports that Portugal has become the first EU country with a sugar shortage.
- The Fed left interest rates and the bond purchase program unchanged.
- Indian inflation in November declined to 7.48 % from 8.58 % in the previous month.
- YoY China's exports grew by 34.9% in November to US$153.33 billion, while the nation's imports surged by 37.7% to $130.43 billion
- China's trade surplus declined to $22.89 billion in November, down from $27.1 billion in October, reports Xinhua.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Reclaim the Cyber-Commons For his film (Astro)Turf Wars, Taki Oldham secretly recorded a training session organised by a rightwing libertarian group called American Majority. The trainer, Austin James, was instructing Tea Party members on how to “manipulate the medium”(11). This is what he told them:
“Here’s what I do. I get on Amazon; I type in “Liberal Books”. I go through and I say “one star, one star, one star”. The flipside is you go to a conservative/ libertarian whatever, go to their products and give them five stars. … This is where your kids get information: Rotten Tomatoes, Flixster. These are places where you can rate movies. So when you type in “Movies on Healthcare”, I don’t want Michael Moore’s to come up, so I always give it bad ratings. I spend about 30 minutes a day, just click, click, click, click. … If there’s a place to comment, a place to rate, a place to share information, you have to do it. That’s how you control the online dialogue and give our ideas a fighting chance.”
“Here’s what I do. I get on Amazon; I type in “Liberal Books”. I go through and I say “one star, one star, one star”. The flipside is you go to a conservative/ libertarian whatever, go to their products and give them five stars. … This is where your kids get information: Rotten Tomatoes, Flixster. These are places where you can rate movies. So when you type in “Movies on Healthcare”, I don’t want Michael Moore’s to come up, so I always give it bad ratings. I spend about 30 minutes a day, just click, click, click, click. … If there’s a place to comment, a place to rate, a place to share information, you have to do it. That’s how you control the online dialogue and give our ideas a fighting chance.”
Quick Overview
- Precious metals will probably give investors the best returns among commodities in the next year, and livestock the worst, Goldman Sachs said. Goldman also sees cotton prices hitting 125 cents a pound in a year's time, and soybeans at $14.00 a bushel.
- YoY China's retail sales of consumer goods grew 18.7% in November
- China’s CPI rose 5.1%, the PPI rose 6.1%.
- China kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged.
- CoreLogic said 10.8 million homes, or 22.5% of those with mortgages, were “underwater” as of Sept. 30th. That's down from 11 million, or 23% in June.
- JPMorgan has quietly reduced a large "short" position in the US silver futures market.
- (Bloomberg) -- Sugar production in Australia, the third-largest exporter, may plunge to the lowest in almost two decades as wet weather forces producers to leave some cane unharvested this season.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Quick Overview
- GE raised its quarterly dividend to 14 cents a share from 12 cents a share, the second increase this year.
- China's inflation surged to a two year high last month despite government control efforts, prompting fears that U.S. consumers will soon face paying more for Chinese made products.
- (Spiegel) It is a triumph for Mexico and a step forward in the fight against global warming: the Cancun climate conference reached a compromise in a dramatic conclusion to negotiations on Saturday. The deal preserves the UN's leadership in climate talks. But the compromises reached were modest
- The United States recorded a larger-than-expected $150 billion budget gap last month.
- The USDA raised projected Corn ending stocks by 5 million to 832 million bushels.
- The USDA has Soybean ending stocks to just 165 million bushels. That represents a 18-day supply.
- The USDA estimates wheat ending stocks to 858 million bushels.
- OPEC ministers announced Saturday the oil output would remain unchanged, while Saudi Arabia said it favors a price between 70 to 80 dollars per barrel.
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Global bond rout deepens on US fiscal worries
The US tax deal adds $1 trillion of stimulus over two years, according to BNP Paribas. America's budget deficit will remain stuck near 10pc of GDP, not just in 2011 but also in 2012. This will push gross public debt to 110pc of GDP under the IMF definition, near the brink of a debt compound spiral. The contrast with fiscal tightening in Europe has become starkly evident.
The US tax deal adds $1 trillion of stimulus over two years, according to BNP Paribas. America's budget deficit will remain stuck near 10pc of GDP, not just in 2011 but also in 2012. This will push gross public debt to 110pc of GDP under the IMF definition, near the brink of a debt compound spiral. The contrast with fiscal tightening in Europe has become starkly evident.
Thursday, December 09, 2010
Quick Overview
- China November trade surplus narrows to $22.9 Bln.
- The U.S. Treasury sold $13 billion in 30-year bonds at a yield of 4.41% -- lower than traders expected.
- U.S household debt fell at an annual rate of 1.75% in Q3 to $13.4 trillion. U.S. household financial assets gained from 43.8 trillion dollars in Q2 to 45.7 trillion dollars in Q3, with household deposits increasing from 7.62 trillion dollars in the second quarter to 7.66 trillion dollars in the third quarter, a sign of U.S. consumers changing habit of saving more and spending less.
- U.S. wholesale inventories rose 1.9% in October
- U.S. weekly jobless claims fell 17,000 to 421,000
- An Italian court sentenced the founder of Parmalat to 18 years in prison for his role in the Italian dairy company's 2003 collapse.
- Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan agreed to launch the Common Economic Space (CES) of the Customs Union on Jan. 1, 2012
- Over the past decade trade between the United States and India has surged by 169 per cent to reach US$38.5 billion in 2010. US exports to India have risen by almost 350% since 2000, US imports from India have risen by 107 %.
Wednesday, December 08, 2010
Quick Overview
- Australia's unemployment rate fell 0.2 % to 5.2% in November.
- Brazil held rates at 10.75%.
- New Zealand left rates at 3.0%.
- Japan's GDP grew at an annualized 4.5% rate in the three months ended Sept. 30.
Tuesday, December 07, 2010
Quick Overview
- US stocks lost gains late in the session after rallying for most of the day on the back of the extension of the Bush tax cuts.
- YoY Bank lending in Japan fell 2.1% in November, marking the 12th successive month of decline.
- YoY Japan's current account surplus rose 2.9 % in October to 1,436.2 billion yen (17.20 billion U.S.)
- MoM Japan's core machinery orders declined 1.4% in October
- The American shipping community - and its customers - praised the US and South Korean governments for reaching consensus on a new free trade deal, and said they look forward to enjoying its benefits once ratified.
- ETF Securities says it has approval from European regulators to launch three physically backed metals ETF’s. Expected to begin trading Friday in London, the ETF’s specialize in copper, nickel and tin.
Monday, December 06, 2010
AkzoNobel has become man's best friend in China thanks to Dulux and its dog
The winning allure, surprisingly, is Dulux's old English sheepdog peering out of paint pots through a mop of white hair. "Having a dog in China has become a status symbol," said Karen Yin, Dulux's marketing director in China. "A dog represents loyalty and the warmth of the family."
The winning allure, surprisingly, is Dulux's old English sheepdog peering out of paint pots through a mop of white hair. "Having a dog in China has become a status symbol," said Karen Yin, Dulux's marketing director in China. "A dog represents loyalty and the warmth of the family."
Quick Overview
- Standard Bank said China’s demand for gold is likely to total 600 tons this year up from less than 500 tons last year, with around 250 tons having to be imported.
- Price increases are decelerating at the greatest pace in nearly 30 years, a paper from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco said.
- Bernanke said the central bank may boost purchases of U.S. debt.
- (FT)The euro falls after Germany casts doubt on the future of eurozone stability by rejecting calls to increase the size of EU bail-out fund and issue a single euro bond.
- Moody’s cut Hungary’s credit rating to just above junk.
- The prospect of additional US stimulus boosts demand for precious metals.
Thursday, December 02, 2010
Quick Overview
- Goldman: American soybean inventories potentially on course to fall to 4.0%, as a proportion of use, the lowest since the 1960s.
- U.S. pending-home sales rose 10.4% in October
- Weekly U.S. jobless claims rise 26,000 to 436,000
- European Central Bank keeps rates at 1%
- China may have a refined sugar shortage of 2.5 million metric tons in the 2010-2011 marketing year that needs to be met by imports or selling reserves, the China Merchandise Reserve Management Centre said.
- BNP Paribas has raised its average 2011 gold-price forecast to $1,500 an ounce and looks for the metal to average $1,600 in 2012.
- The Federal Reserve might need to curtail its $600 billion bond purchase plan if the economy grows more strongly than anticipated, said Charles Plosser.
Wednesday, December 01, 2010
Quick Overview
- Fed Beige Book: US economic growth continues to improve
- U.S Private-sector employment rose 93,000 in November, the largest gain in three years
- Casino revenue rose 42% YoY in November, according to Macau’s Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau.
- (FT)ECB president’s comments that the bank could step up purchases of Eurozone bonds help stabilize European sovereign debt markets and propel global equity markets.
- ISM manufacturing index slips to 56.6% in November
- U.S. Q3 nonfarm productivity revised to 2.3% from prior estimate of 1.9%.
- China's Purchasing Managers Index at 55.2 beat forecast of 54.7.
- South Korea’s imports of iron ore in October were an all-time record at 5.32 Mt – up 34% YoY.
- India’s coal deficit will deepen sharply next year, its coal minister said, forcing Asia’s third largest economy to import more of the fuel on which it relies.
- EU Purchasing Managers index rose to 55.3 from 54.6 in October.
- The unemployment rate in the euro zone hit a record high of 10.1 percent in October.
- S.Korea’s CPI grew by 3.3 % YoY.
- YoY Canada’s GDP grew 1.0 %in Q3
- (Bloomberg) -- China’s gold imports jumped almost fivefold in the first 10 months
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Quick Overview
- [William Sawyer], the [veteran] Florida toxicologist, said the government tests do not look for total petroleum hydrocarbons in the seafood. He said his tests of Gulf shrimp have shown unsafe levels of the compounds, which can cause liver or kidney damage in a matter of weeks.
- U.S. consumer confidence rose to 54.1 in November.
- The Chicago purchasing managers index rose to 62.5 in November from 60.6 in October.
- U.S. Single-family home prices fell 0.7% in September: S&P/Case-Shiller
- India said it may allow sugar exports next month.
- China's Purchasing Managers Index at 55.2 forecast 54.7
Monday, November 29, 2010
Quick Overview
- YoY Sweden's GDP rose 6.9% in Q3.
- The Chicago Fed's Midwest Mfg Index rose 0.7% to 80.9, the highest reading since July
- U.K. house prices fell 0.8% MoM in November and were 1.1% lower YoY.
- Japanese retail sales fell 0.2% in October, the government said Monday, marking the first fall after nine consecutive monthly rises.
- Iran Nuclear Scientist Assassinated; Another Injured.
- Calm in the markets brought by the EU’s €85bn bail-out for Ireland quickly faded as fears returned about the spread of the debt crisis to Portugal and Spain.
- (Guardian) A hellish vision of a world warmed by 4C within a lifetime has been set out by an international team of scientists, who say the agonisingly slow progress of the global climate change talks that restart in Mexico today makes the so-called safe limit of 2C impossible to keep. A 4C rise in the planet's temperature would see severe droughts across the world and millions of migrants seeking refuge as their food supplies collapse
- (Guardian) Scientists claim to be a step closer to reversing the ageing process after rejuvenating worn out organs in elderly mice. The experimental treatment developed by researchers at Harvard Medical School turned weak and feeble old mice into healthy animals by regenerating their aged bodies.
- Japan's October jobless rate 5.1%.
- Czarnikow cut its global cane-sugar production forecast to 134.5 million tons from 137.9 million tons in August.
- India’s economy grew at 8.9% in Q2
Saturday, November 27, 2010
EU rescue costs start to threaten Germany itself
"Germany cannot keep paying for bail-outs without going bankrupt itself," said Professor Wilhelm Hankel, of Frankfurt University. "This is frightening people. You cannot find a bank safe deposit box in Germany because every single one has already been taken and stuffed with gold and silver. It is like an underground Switzerland within our borders. People have terrible memories of 1948 and 1923 when they lost their savings."
"Germany cannot keep paying for bail-outs without going bankrupt itself," said Professor Wilhelm Hankel, of Frankfurt University. "This is frightening people. You cannot find a bank safe deposit box in Germany because every single one has already been taken and stuffed with gold and silver. It is like an underground Switzerland within our borders. People have terrible memories of 1948 and 1923 when they lost their savings."
Quick Overview
- Brazilian navy plans a fleet of 20 subs, six nuclear powered.
- The U.S. Justice Department filed a brief that declared, for the first time, that the U.S. government does not support the patenting of naturally occurring human genes. (About time)
- (FT)Bullion prices denominated in Euros hit a five-month high as concerns about the Eurozone sovereign debt crisis swept across financial markets.
- Weekly U.S. jobless claims drop to 407,000, the lowest level since July 2008.
- The Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index rose to 71.6 in November from 67.7 in October, its highest reading since June.
- The DOE reported:
- Crude-oil inventories rose 1 million barrels
- Supplies of distillates fell 500,000 barrels
- Gasoline stocks rose 1.9 million barrels
- U.S. sales of new single-family homes fell 8.1% in October. There was an 8.6-month supply of homes at the current sales rate. The median sales price fell 14% to $194,900. Sales fell 23.9% in the West, 20.4% in the Midwest and 12.1% in the Northeast. In the South sales gained 3.1%.
- The IGC left world wheat production estimates unchanged at 644 MMT, but raised consumption by 2 MMT to 660 MMT. Global ending stocks are expected down 16 MMT from last season.
- The IGC cut world corn output by 4 MMT from last month to 810 MMT, with ending stocks pegged at 121 MMT, 31 MMT down from last season. World inventories will end 2010-11 at the equivalent of 14.4% of consumption, compared with 18.7% at the close of last season, and tighter than the 16.1% at the end of 2006-07.
- The IGC’s estimate for the world rice harvest was kept at a record 449m tonnes.
- Portugal has, in the face of a squeeze on raw sugar supplies, urged the European Union to relax its import regime, warning that the region has overestimated available supplies of the sweetener.
- (Reuters) - Argentina's 2010/11 soy output is estimated at 49.5 million tons down from 54.5 MMT last year.
- Across multiple studies, a consistent link was identified between glucose levels and aggression, with sugar consumption making people less prone to unprovoked hostility toward strangers. Additionally, researchers found that U.S. states with higher rates of diabetes — a disorder characterized by low glucose and poor glucose tolerance — were plagued by higher rates of violent crime, even after factoring for poverty.
- (Bloomberg) -- Global sugar supplies may fall short of demand next year as Brazil, the world’s largest exporter of the sweetener, razes and replants enough farmland to cover the state of Connecticut.
- China on Friday reported a further slowdown in industrial profit growth due in part to the nation's ongoing campaign to save energy and cut emissions. Profits of major industrial enterprises in 24 provinces grew 51.6 percent in the first 10 months year on year to 2.8 trillion Yuan (427.1 billion U.S. dollars), 1.9 percentage points lower than that for Jan-Sept, the National Bureau of Statistics said on its website.
- In the first nine months, industrial profits decelerated by 2.8 percentage points from the Jan-Aug period. Core business revenue of those enterprises rose by 32.1 percent year on year to 45.3 trillion Yuan in the first 10 months.
- According to the Bank of Korea (BOK), the current account stood at 5.37 billion U.S. dollars in October, rising from 3.95 billion U.S. dollars in September.
- YoY Singapore's manufacturing output increased 31.0 % in October.
- Consumer prices in Japan fell 0.6 % in October, the Japanese government said on Friday.
- Russia says they will import wheat in 2011.
- (Economist)... the Fed has only succeeded in raising America’s broad money supply (as measured by seasonally-adjusted M2) to about $8.8 trillion. China’s central bankers, on the other hand, have increased China’s M2 to almost 70 trillion Yuan, or $10.5 trillion. As Mr. Kroeber points out, China has a greater quantity of money circulating in an economy a third of the size. Who is calling whom easy?
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Quick Overview
- China's demand for vegetable oils will "rise sizably" despite efforts to slow its economy, Oil World says.
- Nearly 70% of American mayors are cutting back on road maintenance and projects as a result of the prolonged economic downturn, according to a new survey of mayors coast-to-coast commissioned by Reader's Digest and conducted by Harris Interactive.
- Borrowing costs for Portugal and Spain have surged to danger levels on fears that Europe's leaders are losing political control of the Irish crisis and have yet to agree on a coherent plan to tackle the euro zone’s deeper debt woes.
- Sales of U.S. existing homes fall 2.2% in October.
- U.S. third-quarter GDP revised to 2.5% growth.
- Gold prices rose as fears of escalating tension on the Korean peninsula and spreading sovereign jitters in Europe drove investors to seek safety.
- The Russian government will start selling grain from the state intervention fund if domestic grain prices rise to 7,000-8,000 rubles ($224-256) per ton, First Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov said Tuesday. The current price for grain stood at 6,000 rubles ($192).
Monday, November 22, 2010
Portugal next as EMU's Máquina Infernal keeps ticking
The eurozone will face its moment of existential danger the day that Portugal is forced to tap the EU bail-out fund. A third rescue in months will push the combined bill towards €300bn (£257bn) and risk exhausting the political capital of EMU, leaving little left for Spain even if the European Financial Stability Facility can in theory handle one more domino
The eurozone will face its moment of existential danger the day that Portugal is forced to tap the EU bail-out fund. A third rescue in months will push the combined bill towards €300bn (£257bn) and risk exhausting the political capital of EMU, leaving little left for Spain even if the European Financial Stability Facility can in theory handle one more domino
Quick Overview
- Investors question whether international efforts to halt a full-blown Eurozone debt crisis are enough.
- The new Basel III banking rules will leave the biggest U.S. banks short of between $100 billion and $150 billion in equity capital, with 90 per cent of the shortfall concentrated in the top six banks, the Financial Times said.
- Singaporeans are the most optimistic consumers in the region, according to the latest Asian Consumer Confidence Index. The index rose 11 points to 137 in Q3.
- Soybeans rose on dry weather in parts of Brazil.
- Precious metals will produce the best commodity returns next year, Goldman Sachs said.
- (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire Warren Buffett said that rich people should pay more in taxes and that Bush-era tax cuts for top earners should be allowed to expire at the end of December.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Quick Overview
- India may produce 8.7 % less Sugar than estimated as rain pests and disease reduce yields.
- (FT) Top mints have seen their silver coin sales jump to record or near-record levels.
- Union Pacific will increase its dividend by 15% to 38 cents.
- The Philly Fed diffusion index rose to 22.5 in November from 1.0 in October.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Why America will come to regret the craven deal Obama is offering Netanyahu.
By Christopher Hitchens
This craven impotence will be noticed elsewhere, and by some very undesirable persons
By Christopher Hitchens
This craven impotence will be noticed elsewhere, and by some very undesirable persons
Quick Overview
- China may impose temporary price controls on “important daily necessities” to counter the fastest inflation in two years, the State Council said today on its website.
- (Price controls have never increased supply! Today the price of corn on the CBOT is $5.25 and $8.10 on the Dalian)
- (Arlan Suderman) There is trade speculation that China may be manipulating the markets to buy large quantities of corn and soybeans before the end of the year.
- The UN warns the world must be vigilant against further supply shocks and prepare for even higher food prices next year if cereal production fails to increase significantly.
- US consumer price inflation rose just 0.2 % in October.
- The DOE said:
- Crude-oil inventories fell 7.3 million barrels
- Gasoline inventories fell 2.7 million barrels
- Distillates inventories fell 1.1 million barrels
- Demand for gold hit 922 metric tons in Q3, a 12% increase YoY, a trade group said.
- Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told lawmakers the Fed's $600 billion economic aid program could create 700,000 jobs over two years.
- Buffett has written a 'Thank You' note to 'Uncle Sam' for preventing a catastrophic economic meltdown in September of 2008
- [AP] - The nation's largest banks must undergo new stress tests to show they can weather another recession, and the Fed said those that pass them can boost dividends paid to investors.
- U.S. New home starts fell 11.7% in October to an annualized rate of 519,000 -- the lowest rate in 18 months.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
The horrible truth starts to dawn on Europe's leaders
He is admitting that the gamble of launching a premature and dysfunctional currency without a central treasury, or debt union, or economic government, to back it up – and before the economies, legal systems, wage bargaining practices, productivity growth, and interest rate sensitivity, of North and South Europe had come anywhere near sustainable convergence – may now backfire horribly.
He is admitting that the gamble of launching a premature and dysfunctional currency without a central treasury, or debt union, or economic government, to back it up – and before the economies, legal systems, wage bargaining practices, productivity growth, and interest rate sensitivity, of North and South Europe had come anywhere near sustainable convergence – may now backfire horribly.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Quick Overview
- (Bloomberg) China may impose price limits on food and toughen punishment of those found speculating on agriculture futures including corn and cotton to combat rising inflation, the China Securities Journal reported
- Korea raised rates by 0.25 points.
- U.S. retail sales grew 1.2% in October.
- Conditions for manufacturers in the New York area deteriorated sharply in November, with a New York Fed survey turning negative for the first time since June 2009.
- (Bloomberg) The International Monetary Fund reduced the weighting of the U.S. dollar and the yen and increased that of the euro in its Special Drawing Rights valuation basket after its regular five-year review.
- Mexico's tourism income rose 10.8% YoY.
- Japan's economy grew an annualized 3.9% in Q3.
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Quick Overview
- (MarketWatch) -- German industrial giant Siemens AG raised its dividend for the latest fiscal year by 70% and outlined Thursday a new dividend policy, saying it plans to distribute 30% to 50% of net profit to shareholders.
- Intel raises dividend by 15%
- (Bloomberg) -- The world’s largest banks won a reprieve of at least a year before facing extra measures that would force them to rein in risk as divisions within the Group of 20 nations delayed an agreement on such rules.
- Fears that China is poised to raise interest rates and worries over the euro zone’s fiscal crisis earlier battered commodities.
- Euro-zone GDP rose 0.4% QoQ and 1.9% YoY
- The preliminary University of Michigan gauge of consumer sentiment rose to 69.3 from 67.7 in October.
- Prime Minister Ali Mujawar said Somali pirates are holding 813 sailors from across the world hostage.
- China's port capacity is estimated to be as much as 40% more than current demand.
- Japan’s GDPt rose an annualized 3.9 % in the three months ended Sept. 30.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
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