Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Quick Overview

  • The Fed cut the fed funds rate from 4.50% to 4.25%, as expected.

  • U.S. wholesale sales rose 0.7% in October.

  • Australia November business confidence fell to 6 from 9.

  • China November CPI rose 6.9% (6.5% expected).

  • China’s November Trade Surplus at 26.28B (26.55B expected).

  • Japan November Consumer Confidence fell to 40.00 (43.0 expected).

  • German investor confidence fell from -32.5 to -37.2 -- a 15 year low.

  • The USDA's 2007-2008 U.S. ending stocks estimate for:
    Corn was reduced from 1.897 to 1.797 billion bushels.
    Soybeans were reduced from 210 to 185 million bushels.
    Wheat was reduced from 312 to 280 million bushels.
    Sugar was increased from 1.880 to 2.050 million tons.
    Cotton was increased from 7.60 to 7.70 million bales.

  • The USDA's 2007-2008 world ending stocks estimate for:
    Corn was reduced from 110.4 to 109.1 million tons.
    Soybeans were reduced from 49.4 to 47.3 million tons.
    Wheat was increased from 109.8 to 110.1 million tons.
    Cotton was increased from 54.8 to 55.3 million bales.

  • The USDA's estimates the Florida orange crop at 168 million boxes with a yield of 1.60 gallons per box.


Monday, December 10, 2007


Stonehenge: The Incredibly Simple Secret of How It Was Built
Wallington has discovered what he believes is the incredibly simple secret of how the ancients managed to build Stonehenge. He demonstrates in this video

Quick Overview

  • The National Association of Realtors said the pending U.S. home sales index was up 0.6% in October but down 18.4% YoY.

  • Japan’s machinery orders rose 12.7% in October, stronger than expected.

  • YoY U.K.'s manufacturing prices rose 4.5% in November.

  • China's November PPI rose 4.6% YoY vs. 3.5% expected.

  • China raised bank reserve requirement ratio by 1 %, the largest such move since 2003

  • UBS announced it will write down $10 billion in US subprime investments.

  • A trade group for real-estate agents said the battered housing market is on the verge of stabilizing and raised its outlook for 2007 and 2008 home sales.

  • The current US ethanol capacity is 7.3 billion gallons a year. If the projected new capacity comes on line during 2008, capacity will rise to 13.5 billion gallons a year.

  • The USDA increased its estimate of the 2007-2008 world coffee crop from 118.9 to 122.9

  • Rongcheng’s cargo volume for foreign trade grew 78% YoY

Sunday, December 09, 2007

Friday, December 07, 2007

Quick Overview

  • US Nov. ICSC Chain Store Sales grew 3.5% YoY vs. 2.4% expected and 1.6% in Oct.

  • Japan final Q3 GDP growth number adjusted down to 1.5% annualized vs. 2.6% expected

  • Australia Nov. construction index fell to 53.2 from 57.4 MoM.

  • Canada’s unemployment rate rose from 5.8% to 5.9%

  • The International Sugar Organization said that India's sugar production will fall 20% in 2008-2009.

  • (Bloomberg) -- …Less than 0.5 inch (1.3 centimeters) of rain will fall the next five days in Argentina before temperatures rise to as much as 10 degrees Fahrenheit above normal, increasing crop stress, said Drew Lerner, president of World Weather Inc. in Overland Park, Kansas. Dry weather will prevail into January when crops are reproducing and may spread into southern Brazil, he said.

  • The CIA disclosed that it had made and destroyed videotapes of terrorism interrogations.

  • The port of Guangzhou's cumulative throughput rose 41 % YoY to 8.4 million TEU.
Our star in pictures
The Japanese Hinode satellite has discovered a type of magnetic wave that ripples through the plasma of the sun’s atmosphere or “corona”. The waves may heat the corona to extreme temperatures by releasing energy as they travel outward from the sun along magnetic field lines. This could help explain the “corona problem” - the fact that the sun’s surface is only about 6,000 kelvin while the corona is at least 1 million kelvin

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Quick Overview

  • (Reuters) - Housing markets from Punta Gorda, Florida, to Stockton, California, will crash and suffer price drops of more than 30 percent before the housing crisis is over, a report from Moody's Economy.com said.


  • U.S. Jobless claims fell 15,000 last week to 338,000.

  • U.S. Treasury Secretary Paulson announced a plan to help roughly 1.2 million distressed homeowners avoid foreclosure.

  • The Bank of England cut interest rates from 5.75% to 5.50%

  • The European Central Bank kept its interest rate unchanged at 4.0%.

  • Toll Brothers Inc reported a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss.

  • Statistics Canada estimates Canada's 2007 wheat production at 20.05 million tons, down 21% YoY and down 587,000 tons from their September guess.

  • Statistics Canada estimates 2007 corn production at 11.65 million tons, up 30% YoY.

  • The U.S. Department of Energy said underground supplies of natural gas were down 88 billion cubic feet last week to 3.44 trillion cubic feet.

  • YoY Oct. traffic at major US container ports fell 3.5%.

  • The Reserve Bank of New Zealand left rates unchanged at 8.25%

  • Japan Nov. preliminary Machine Tool Orders rose 13.0% YoY

Cheap no more
Rising incomes in Asia and ethanol subsidies in America have put an end to a long era of falling food prices

China May Exhaust Existing Gold Mines in Six Years
Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- China, poised to overtake the U.S. as the second-biggest gold producer this year, must acquire more bullion assets overseas because existing mines will run out of ore in six years, Zijin Mining Group Co. said.

Wednesday, December 05, 2007


Shipping chief warns of ‘insane’ charter rates
One of the biggest operators in the booming dry bulk shipping market has warned that conditions where charter rates for ships have nearly tripled in a year, were “insane” and “unsustainable”.

Quick Overview

  • The Institute of Supply Managements' index of services fell from 55.8 to 54.1 -- still recording growth.

  • U.S. Productivity rose 6.3% -- the most since 2003

  • US consumer confidence declined to 24 from 21 last week.

  • U.S. factory orders rose 0.5% in October.

  • U.S. non-farm productivity rose 2.7% -- better than estimated.

  • U.S. Unit labor costs rose 3.0%.

  • Australia left rates unchanged at 6.75% as expected

  • Australia’s Nov. Services Index rose to 56.4 from 53.2.

  • UK‘s Consumer confidence dropped to 86 vs. 94 expected

  • QoQ Australia GDP rose 1.0%, YoY GDP rose 4.3% vs. 4.8% expected.

  • The U.S. Department of Energy said that:
    Supplies of crude oil fell 8.0 million barrels to 305.2 million barrels
    Supplies of gasoline rose 4.0 million barrels.
    Supplies of heating oil supplies fell 1.1 million barrels.
    Refinery use unchanged at 89.4% of capacity.
    Gasoline demand rose 0.2%
    Distillate demand rose 5.9%.

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Corn Jumps to Highest in Five Months on Demand for U.S. Exports
Current moderate La Nina weather conditions in the equatorial Pacific Ocean may lead to dry weather during South America's critical corn-pollination period in January, Widenor said. In three of the four moderate La Nina periods since 1950, Argentina's growing regions received as little as 25 percent of normal rainfall in January, he said.

Subprime Rate Five-Year Fix Eyed by U.S. Regulators, Lenders
About 100,000 subprime loans will jump from their discounted initial rates every month for the next two years, UBS AG estimates. American home foreclosures almost doubled in October from a year earlier as subprime borrowers failed to make higher payments on adjustable-rate mortgages,...
...These mortgages usually begin with a rate of between 7 percent to 9 percent and then reset to between 11 percent and 13 percent. ``What we are talking about is having these loans modified, so they continue for a longer period of time at the starter rate,'' ..

Quick Overview

  • UK Nov. BRC retail sales monitor says retail sales rose 3.1% YoY, as discounting increased revenues.

  • Australia Oct. retail sales rose 0.2% vs. 0.6% expected.

  • The Bank of Canada reduced its benchmark rate from 4.50% to 4.25%

Monday, December 03, 2007


THE NIE REPORT: SOLVING A GEOPOLITICAL PROBLEM WITH IRAN
With this announcement, the dynamics of the Middle Eastern region, Iraq and U.S.-Iranian relations shift dramatically. For one thing, the probability of a unilateral strike against Iranian nuclear targets is gone. Since there is no Iranian nuclear weapons program, there is no rationale for a strike. Moreover, if Iran is not engaged in weapons production, then a broader air campaign designed to destabilize the Iranian regime has no foundation either.

Quick Overview

  • U.S. Treasury’s Henry Paulson is confident an agreement will soon be reached that will help thousands of homeowners avoid mortgage defaults by temporarily holding their interest rates steady.

  • Japan Q3 Capital Spending rose 3.4% YoY

  • Australia's Oct. Trade Balance out at -2983M vs. -1800M expected.

  • EU 13 unemployment fell to 7.2 % in October.

  • The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index fell to 50.8 in November -- the fifth straight monthly decline.

  • The U.S. average price of diesel pushed past a record level for the third time in four weeks, rising 3.4 cents a gallon to $3.444.

  • Gold demand in China, including the mainland, Hong Kong and Taiwan, rose 24 percent in the third quarter to 88.1 tons, the World Gold Council said.

  • The U.S. national debt is expanding by about $1.4 billion a day -- or nearly $1 million a minute.

  • Manufacturing in the U.K. rose from 52.8 to 54.4 in November.
Sex, chocolate, meat top brain boosters
Plenty of sex, dark chocolate and cold meats are the latest keys to boosting your brain power, according to a new book published in Britain.

Sunday, December 02, 2007


Bush Administration Offers Paul Wolfowitz Top State Department Job
Don't ever say the Bush administration doesn't take care of its own. Nearly three years after Paul Wolfowitz resigned as deputy Defense secretary and six months after his stormy departure as president of the World Bank—amid allegations that he improperly awarded a raise to his girlfriend—he's in line to return to public service. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has offered Wolfowitz, a prime architect of the Iraq War, a position as chairman of the International Security Advisory Board..

Saturday, December 01, 2007

Banks may freeze subprime loan rates to avoid home foreclosures
The banks' plan recognizes that, absent a proactive move, many subprime ARMs could reset next year to 12 percent or more from current rates of 7 percent to 9 percent.
"I think there is a basic assumption here that there is money that is going to be lost one way or the other," said Wayne Abernathy, the executive director of financial institution policy at the American Bankers Association.

Guantanamo prisoners to ask Supreme Court for basic rights
Multiple Guantanamo Bay cases are being combined for an hour-long oral argument Wednesday morning. The justices must first decide whether some 340 foreign-born prisoners are protected by constitutional habeas corpus guarantees.
Habeas corpus, which in Latin means "produce the body," is a 13th century tenant of law enshrined in the U.S. Constitution. It enables prisoners to demand in federal court the legal justification and factual basis for their detention.