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krisluke
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13-Dec-2011 21:58
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What To Expect From Today's FOMC Decision |
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krisluke
Supreme |
13-Dec-2011 21:53
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MORGAN STANLEY: This Is What The World's Big Currencies Will Do In 2012 |
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krisluke
Supreme |
13-Dec-2011 21:41
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The commodity is moving gradually to the downside attempting to test the latest lows near 97.40. Stochastic oscillator is within oversold areas, however downside momentum is slowing down, where Stochastic and RSI is providing signs of bullish divergence near this support area, therefore, we expect the commodity to recover some of the recent losses, but taking into consideration that we are trading around the middle of the range among 103.00-95.00 making the risk-reward ratio inappropriate we will wait for another push to the downside to anticipate the upside move. The trading range for the day may be among the major support at 94.50 and the major resistance at 101.50 The short-term trend is to the downside with steady weekly closing below 105.00 targeting 65.00. Support: 97.10, 96.20, 95.60, 95.00, 94.50 Resistance: 98.30, 99.00, 99.60, 100.30, 101.00 Recommendation Based on the charts and explanations above we recommend buying oil around 96.00 targeting 97.10 and 98.50, stop loss with four-hour closing below 95.00
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krisluke
Supreme |
13-Dec-2011 21:40
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Crude oil is struggling around its opening levels Crude oil is correcting some of yesterday’s losses as it rises today amid signs that the world’s biggest economy is recovering well, and retail sales is expected to rise, which added hopes that it will help the global growth and support it. Crude oil is trying to erase some of yesterday’s losses which achieved due to the pessimism that spread in financial markets that EU summit did not add any positive signs that Europe could solve its crisis, where Fitch said that the summit did little to ease pressure on Europe’s sovereign-bond ratings. Crude oil opened today’s session at $97.86 to reach a low of $97.62 and a high of $98.21, where it is currently hovering around its opening levels. Moody’s, the other leading rating agency said that it will consider reviewing the whole EU members by the first quarter of next year, which means that the agency didn’t see any major changes or appropriate solutions that presented by EU summit. Crude is struggling today amid a lot of negative signs from major economies except US which might show encouraging retail sales figures today, as speculations spurred about China that it may end up using tax cuts to stimulate expansion next year, where the exports growth weakens and the economic growth eased to 9.1% during last quarter, which is considered the lowest pace in more than two years. Today, the US officials may intensify their discussions on how to stimulate the economy but it is not expected to announce any monetary easing measures today as many signs are showing a good recovery pace in the economy as it expanded at 2.5% annually in the third quarter, the fastest pace in a year and forecasters hope growth will reach 3% in the current quarter. It is not expected as we said any major announcement after the meeting today, but the Fed’s officials may discuss a new plan to forecast the direction of short-term rates starting next year and to mention the challenges that face the economy, which will calm markets and support the confidence. On the other hand, the Iranian Oil Minister said earlier this week that the European Union " definitely" will not impose sanctions on OPEC member Iran's oil exports because such a measure would harm the global crude market, as the EU leaders called on Friday for more sanctions against Iran by the end of January. Nonetheless, crude oil is expected to show more volatility ahead of OPEC’s meeting due on Wednesday, after EU considers blocking the Iranian oil production is actually pushing oil to the upside while the debt crisis and slowing global growth outlook is weighing negatively as well. Volatility will sharpen today ahead of major data that will be released by US, as it is the main factor that is helping crude to maintain his current levels after yesterday’s decline, as the US figures may show a good retail sales results in November, which will add positive signs on the world’s biggest economy that is doing well amid challenges from deepening debt crisis in Europe. With the start of this week gold declined sharply as pessimism spread in the market after the European summit on Friday failed to quell jitters and provide a comprehensive plan to tackle the two-year old debt crisis, yet markets rebounded slightly today as optimism spread in the market ahead of the FOMC rate decision and the retail sales index from the world’s largest economy, which started to recover in a faster pace than other major economies. Gold opened the session in Asia today at $1665.90 per ounce, and recorded the highest at $1667.99 and the lowest at $1650.49 and is currently hovering around the level of $1660.00 per ounce. The U.S. dollar fluctuated heavily after starting the session in Asia today, where the index is affected by the mixed sentiment in the market, where fears and debt concerns in the market supported investors to hold the U.S. dollar in order to avert as much risk as possible, but on the other hand, the slight wave of optimism seen weakened the U.S. dollar and in result reflected cautious trading across the board. However, the sentiment is mixed in the market, where despite the positive bias seen in the market, the escalating debt crisis in Europe and the failure from leaders to create a firewall to protect other nations from the debt crisis contagion could cost the euro-area region its credit rating, which renewed fears and debt concerns and reflected some demand for safe havens. Markets are waiting for rating agencies to act after the European summit, where Standard & Poor’s threatened the euro area region before the summit with a possible downgrade, yet the agency still didn’t comment on the summit, while the decision is expect anytime this week. On the other hand, Moody’s Investors Service explained on Monday that the agency intends to review the rating of the entire European Union in the first quarter of the next year, where the agency clarified that European leaders provide “few new measures” to tackle the two-year debt crisis. Fitch Ratings agency also provided negative comments regarding the European summit, where the agency said despite the new treaty reached for a deeper economic integration, European leaders failed to provide a “comprehensive” solution to solve the debt crisis, which in result added more pressures on the euro-area region credit rating. Among other previous metals, silver also fluctuated heavily after opening the session at $31.27 per ounce, and recorded a high of $31.29 and a low of $30.88, and trades now around $31.18 per ounce. Platinum on the other hand gained $3.25 per ounce or 0.22% after opening the session at $1487.00 per ounce, recording the highest at $1494.75 and the lowest at $1483.25, and is trading now around $1490.25 per ounce Markets are expected to remain volatile ahead of the FOMC rate decision expected later in the day, with expectations the Fed could have left rates unchanged near its zero range in order to support growth further especially when unemployment fell to 8.6% and personal spending improved, while the economy started to recover in a faster pace. |
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krisluke
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13-Dec-2011 21:37
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The EU summit did little to help revive market confidence. On the contrary, investors got more pessimistic and risk appetite declined as rating agencies warned of downgrading credit ratings of European bonds. Wall Street plummeted with the DJIA and S& P 500 losing -1.34% and -1.49% respectively. In the commodity sector, the front-month contract for WTI crude slipped -1.65% while the equivalent Brent crude contract dipped -1.23%. The benchmark Comex contract for gold fell in tandem with, breaking below 1700 for the first time since November 28 and ended the day at 1668.8, down -2.83%. Moody's said that it would review the credit ratings of EU countries in the first quarter of net year as the EU summit failed to deliver 'decisive policy measures'. This would result in 'further shocks and the cohesion of the euro area under continued threat'. While the agency acknowledged EU leaders' efforts on fiscal consolidation, it criticized there were 'few new measures and points out that many are similar to previously announced ones'. As a result, Moody's believed that 'the crisis is in a critical and volatile stage, with sovereign and bank debt markets prone to acute dislocation which policymakers will find increasingly hard to contain'. Although Moody's retained the central scenario that that the Eurozone will be 'preserved without further widespread defaults, the shocks that are likely to materialise even under this 'positive' scenario carry negative rating implications in the coming months. Moreover, the longer the incremental approach to policy persists, the greater the likelihood of more severe scenarios, including those involving multiple defaults by euro area countries and those additionally involving exits from the euro area'. The outcome of the summit was not a favorable one. Fitch's shared the worries by stating that 'It seems that a 'comprehensive solution' to the current crisis is not on offer' while French presidential candidate Francois Hollande said that 'this accord is not the right answer...If I am elected president, I will negotiate, renegotiate this accord'. Concerning the dataflow, UK's CPI probably moderated to +4.8% y/y in November from +5.0% a month ago. Core CPI is expected to have eased to +3.3% from +3.4% in October. In the Eurozone, ZEW economic sentiment probably slipped to -60.3 in December from -59.1 in the prior month. In the US, retail sales might have climbed +0.6% m/m in November after a +0.5% gain in October. Excluding auto, the reading probably gained +0.4%, easing from +0.6% in October. The FOMC meeting will be held in the US session but policymakers are not expected to adjust the monetary policy. |
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krisluke
Supreme |
13-Dec-2011 21:35
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Trade surplus in China narrowed to $14.5B in November from $17.0B a month ago. During the month, growth in exports moderated to +13.8% as EU demand weakened. Growth in imports also softened, signaled slowdown in domestic activities was a result of the global economic headwind and the Chinese government's tightening measures. As indicated in the report, exports grew +13.8% in November, easing for the 3rd consecutive month since August. Exports to the EU, China's biggest export market, increased +5.0% y/y, moderating further from a +7.5% gain in October. Sales to Germany and Italy slipped -1.6%and 23.0% respectively. Exports to Japan also slowed to +17.7% y/y in November from +19.6% in the prior month. In the US, growth unexpectedly accelerated to +17.0% from +13.9% in October. On the other hand, growth in ASEAN countries remained robust at +21.5% y/y during the month after a sharp deceleration of +14.3% in October. Growth in imports continued to outpace exports in November, suggesting resilient Chinese growth in comparison with deterioration in global economic activities. However, the growth rate of +22.1% was a drop from +28.7% in October. Imports of crude oil, copper and iron ore eased on annual basis compared with October. However, growth in import volume for these items accelerated on, on monthly basis as a result of restocking on falling prices. It's hard to expect the situation to sustain in coming months as the slowdown in domestic investment will likely reducing demand for commodities. As inflationary pressure eased and trade surplus narrowed in China, the pressure on RMB appreciation will likely be moderated. In the meantime, the government would find it necessary to shift the focus from controlling inflation to managing robust growth for soft landing. Elsewhere in Europe, headline inflation in the UK eased to 4.8% y/y in November from +5.0% a month ago. Core CPI fell to +3.2% during the month from +3.4% in October. The market had anticipated a milder dip to +3.3%. Inflation will likely fall further in coming months as the VAT hike implemented in January 2011 will not have impact on inflation in the coming year. ZEW confidence data in the Eurozone delivered pleasant surprises in December. The 17-nation region economic sentiment index surprisingly improved to -54.1 in December from -59.1 a month ago. The reading in Germany alone recovered to -53.8 from -55.2 in November. However, the current situation index for Germany unexpectedly slipped to 26.8 from 34.2 in November. |
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krisluke
Supreme |
13-Dec-2011 21:33
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Gold Daily Technical OutlookComex Gold (GC)Gold dives further to as low as 1654.4 so far today. The break of 1667.1 support confirms resumption of whole decline from 1804.4. Also, it suggests that who el rebound from 1535 is finished already. Intraday bias remains on the downside and deeper fall should be seen to 100% projection of 1804.4 to 1667.1 from 1767.1 at 1629.8. On the upside, above 1688.0 minor resistance will turn bias neutral and bring consolidations. But we'll stay bearish and expects another decline as long as 1767.1 resistance holds. In the bigger picture, price actions form 1923.7 high is viewed as a medium term consolidation pattern only. The first leg has finished with a five to 1535. The second leg is likely completed at 1804.4. Fall from there is treated as the third leg of the consolidation and should target 1535 and possibly below. Though, at this point, we'd anticipate strong support from 1478.3/1577.4 support zone to complete the consolidation and bring up trend resumption. Comex Gold Continuous Contract 4 Hours Chart
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Sporeguy
Elite |
12-Dec-2011 10:19
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Don't forget, more vibrant goes with more crimes !
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bishan22
Elite |
12-Dec-2011 07:53
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Not forgeting Genting casino packed with visitors especially retired singaporeans. No need to pay $100 levy. In and out of casino any time. haha.
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tanglinboy
Elite |
12-Dec-2011 07:48
Yells: "hello!" |
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Honestly, I think Malaysia is more vibrant than Singapore. Just look at KL.. so much life | ||
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krisluke
Supreme |
11-Dec-2011 23:00
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Najib to talk to S'pore about Iskandar Malaysia collaboration SINGAPORE: Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak says he will make an announcement on collaboration with Singapore on the Iskandar Malaysia development project during a bilateral meeting next month. Prime Minister Najib and his Singapore counterpart, Lee Hsien Loong, are scheduled to have their next retreat meeting in Kuala Lumpur and Channel NewsAsia understands from Malaysian sources that 5th January is a possible date for the meeting. Mr Najib gave Johor's tourism industry a booster on Sunday, announcing that the newly-completed Johor Premium Outlets will expand with an additional investment of 100 million Malaysian ringgit. He was speaking at the official launch of Johor Premium Outlets, an upscale outlet shopping centre located about half an hour's drive from Singapore's Tuas Checkpoint. Mr Najib described the shopping complex as a key development in the Iskandar Malaysia region - an economic development zone in the southern corridor. " I have no doubt Johor Premium Outlets will play an important role in helping to draw more domestic and foreign investors to this region and I am confident we will see (not only) an influx of local consumers but also international visitors from across Southeast Asia and the Middle East," said Mr Najib. " I am sure many of our international tourists will take advantage of the favourable exchange rate and discover that it is more economical for them to buy their goods and do their shopping here," he added. Johor Premium Outlets is a joint venture between the Malaysian Genting Group and the Simon Property Group of the United States. The S$60m (150-million-Malaysian-ringgit) investment offers shoppers a spread of 80 designer brand outlets. Mr Najib said the project is a leading one under Malaysia's economic transformation programme. Occupying 44 acres of land, the outlet is situated in the middle of an oil palm plantation. And it being just half an hour's drive from Singapore's Tuas Checkpoint, Mr Najib notes there is already enormous interest from both Singaporeans and regional shoppers. The outlet hopes to draw close to three million visitors in its first year of operations. And there are already plans for expansion. Mr Najib said: " I am in a position to announce that they will embark on the second phase of the Johor Premium Outlets with an additional investment of 100 million ringgit, adding 60 new shops, making it a 130 altogether in a very short period of time." Also in the piepline is a water park, developing the conventions and exhibitions sector in the area and a hotel with nearly 2,000 rooms. Chairman and chief executive of Genting Berhad, Lim Kok Thay, said: " I am very happy that our project has stimulated economic activities in this region, providing over 3,000 new job opportunities and many more indirect jobs in Johor and neighbouring states. " More importantly, it will help to retain and develop our local talent. Johor Premium Outlets will leverage on the global strength and brand value of the premium outlets portfolio of the Simon Property Group and the brand name and marketing resources of Genting. " It will synergise with the Genting property leisure and hospitality operations of Malaysia and worldwide." For the Malaysian government, the Johor Premium Outlets project is an important one, especially with its close proximity to Iskandar Malaysia. Mr Najib said investments in Iskandar Malaysia continue to grow year by year and he expects more investments to come in from countries like China, Japan, South Korea and also the Middle Eastern countries. As of September this year, investment commitments by various countries in Iskandar Malaysia are worth nearly S$32 billion. - CNA/ir |
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krisluke
Supreme |
11-Dec-2011 22:55
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krisluke
Supreme |
11-Dec-2011 22:21
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Asia's economy heading for 'yo-yo' year in 2012SINGAPORE: Asia's economic growth looks set to stumble over the next few months, prompting a flurry of interest rate cuts and a spike in stimulus spending that may ultimately pave the way for a strong recovery in the second half of 2012. " The catch-phrase for 2012 is the Asia yo-yo," said Rob Subbaraman, chief Asia economist at Nomura in Hong Kong. " The harder Asia's economies are hit, the stronger the tailwinds for a bounce back." The idea that bad news would beget good news was a recurring theme in economists' year-end outlooks. India, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines are widely expected to lower interest rates next year. Elections in Taiwan, Malaysia and South Korea may shake loose even more government spending. China will most likely continue cutting banks' reserve requirements to try to spur more lending. But beyond the basic premise that Asian policymakers will be in easing mode, there was little consensus on how each country would weather the turmoil. Between Europe's simmering debt troubles, concerns about a housing downturn in China, and an uncertain U.S. growth trajectory, there were too many wild cards. CAPITAL FLIGHT FRIGHT European banks' claims on Asia, excluding Japan, amount to $1.4 trillion, according to data from the Bank for International Settlements. If Europe's debt problems intensify and its banks retrench, they may pull back some of that credit with little warning, leaving Asia vulnerable to a sudden exodus of capital. Singapore stands out among the most heavily exposed, with European bank claims amounting to 83 percent of the country's gross domestic product, said Chua Hak Bin, a Bank of America-Merrill Lynch economist based in Singapore. For Malaysia, they add up to 25 percent of GDP. It is difficult to predict if, when or where European banks will pull the plug. Foreign investors have yanked money out of Indonesian bonds and Indian equities in recent months, evidence of a global bout of risk aversion. But it is harder to track how much bank deleveraging has actually occurred. BIS data, considered the most reliable, comes with about a six-month lag. Nomura's Subbaraman said based on anecdotal information gleaned from market sources, " it doesn't feel like there's been wholesale withdrawals from European banks." He added, however, that there was " a lot of scope" for such withdrawals. WILL CHINA LAND WITH A THUD? For some Asian economies, it is China rather than Europe that will most influence 2012's course. China is the largest trading partner for many Asian countries, and it is no longer simply an assembly point for goods destined for export. Nomura's data shows that 58 percent of China's imports served domestic demand in the third quarter of 2011, up from 44 percent at the start of 2007. That means what happens inside China matters a great deal for the rest of Asia. The biggest domestic worry centers on China's cooling property market, and the repercussions for bank lending and local government borrowing. Beijing orchestrated a real estate slowdown this year to try to avoid a damaging property boom and bust. But the side effect has been a rise in troubled loans to developers, and a drop in land sales that has cut off a vital source of revenue for heavily indebted local governments. Credit Suisse, which has been among the more bearish in its forecasts on China's housing sector, predicted property prices would fall 10 percent in 2012, bringing the cumulative decline to 20 percent from a mid-2011 peak. China's central bank said on December 2 that home prices were at a " turning point" and banks were concerned about a possible chain reaction if prices were to fall by 20 percent. Many market watchers took that as a signal that Beijing would ease some of the restrictions it placed on home purchases. China has already reduced the amount of reserves that big banks must hold, a measure that freed up an estimated $55 billion to $63 billion in lending capacity. Economists expect China to continue lowering banks' reserve requirements. That in turn should help spark stronger growth in the second half of 2012. Zhu Haibin, JPMorgan's China economist, thinks the second-half recovery will be so robust that Beijing may resume raising interest rates toward the end of the year. " Basically our view is that China's interest rates are still behind the curve," Zhu said. " We don't think that the policy normalisation was complete before it came to a halt." WAKING THE INFLATION DRAGON The policy-induced second-half bounceback assumes that inflation remains subdued. That appears to be a safe bet, at least in the near term. Commodity prices have come down sharply since May, helping to bring down inflation in China, Indonesia, South Korea and elsewhere. But the same forces that are likely to propel stronger second-half growth could also revive price pressures. A flood of easy money, coupled with renewed economic strength in commodity consumers like China, may stoke inflation. Barclays economists warned that the " inflation dragon is resting for a while" and could wake with a vengeance in late 2012. " One can envisage a scenario in which a bottoming out in global growth and the combined effects of past liquidity injections feed into global commodity prices and inflation at exactly the same time, risking a repeat of what occurred at the beginning of 2011," Barclays wrote in a research note. |
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krisluke
Supreme |
11-Dec-2011 22:14
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Don't get too excited over recent improved numbers--some of the statistics are just good luck.
By Robert Johnson, CFA  | 12-10-11  | 06:00  AM  |  E-mail Article
The economic news flow this week was almost nonexistent. Markets remained basically unchanged as investors awaited the results of yet another European summit. Despite all the troubles in Europe, U.S. exports to the region continued to grow, according to the latest trade report.
Back in the U.S., the services economy, which had shown some nice improvement this summer, paused as consumers appeared to opt for more cars and sharply discounted retail goods instead of service-related offerings. Weekly retail figures would also seem to indicate that strong retail sales over the Black Friday period were no fluke. The International Council of Shopping Centers indicated that weekly retail sales for the period ending Dec. 2, 2011, were up 3.8% from a year ago. Initial unemployment claims and a Conference Board report both showed an improving labor market too.
    This week, I will  take a look at a lot of special and perhaps one-time factors that may be making some of the economic data look a bit better than it actually is. Don't get me wrong--I am still bullish on the U.S. economy, but for a change we are catching a bit of tailwind that we all need to understand.     More Improvement in the Balance of Trade The reported U.S. trade deficit dropped from $44.2 billion in September to $43.5 billion in October. However, the improvement occurred because exports fell less (down $1.5 billion) than imports (down $2.2 billion). The deficit is now at its lowest point of the year, a highly unusually phenomenon for an economy that has grown throughout 2011. During the previous recovery, the deficit spiked as high as the mid-$60 billion range. Rising U.S. energy production and, more recently, falling oil prices, have certainly contributed to a better trade situation. At a minimum it now appears the trade balance is unlikely to hurt the fourth-quarter GDP calculation, and it may actually help. That said, I'd still rather have seen exports go up (though they actually were up on an inflation-adjusted basis) indicating a generally strong world economy.     U.S. exports to Europe showed some weakening viewed on a year-over-year basis and a little bit of a gain sequentially from September. I suspect that sequential gain is related to seasonality. Recall that Europe represents just over 3% of U.S. GDP. On a year-over-year basis exports to Europe grew 10% in October compared with an 18% gain for all of 2011, indicating some moderation. Sequentially exports were up 1%. As brutal as the news has been from Europe, I am impressed that U.S. exports haven't really suffered.     Hard to Draw Conclusions from Purchasing Manager Survey on Services ISM's purchasing manager survey posted a surprise drop in October, with the index falling to 52.0 from 52.8, below consensus estimates. Orders and activity were both at healthy levels and improved while the employment portion was down (unlike almost every other measure of employment growth). That employment news is at odds with huge service sector gains in the Labor Department's November report.      While a disappointment, the overall ISM services metric does remain above 50, the level that generally indicates at least some growth. It appears from strong holiday sales reports that consumers are opting for physical goods at the expense of services. Booming sales of budget-priced TVs and a resurgence in auto sales are also hurting services growth at least in the short run. Note that last week's PMI for manufacturing improved over the same time frame and now exceeds the services survey results.     I'd prefer the services sector be performing better, because it is a much bigger portion of the U.S. economy compared with manufacturing, and services revenue tends to stay with U.S. suppliers, providing a bigger boost to GDP. A hefty portion of retail goods are produced overseas, aiding our friends in Asia and Europe. I hope that after the holiday season the services sector will step up from its current lethargic levels.     More Good News on Employment Initial claims for unemployment dropped to 381,000 on a one-week basis versus 404,000 the previous week. The less-volatile four-week moving average dropped to 393,500. Another week or two of weekly data below 390,000 would bring the moving average to the very best level of the recovery (389,500 reached in April 2011) and to its best level since the spring of 2008. Remember this data point peaked at almost 700,000 at the worst of the recession in early 2009.     On the other side, 290,000-300,000 was the very best level of the last recovery, and levels that low lasted for less than a couple of months in 2006. I do caution that large seasonal factors (substantially reducing the raw data this time of year) and odd holiday work schedules at employment offices make the data a little more volatile. The Conference Board's predictive employment index was also highly positive when released this week, jumping 1.2% from October it's now at its best level since September 2008. Seven of the eight components of the index, including temporary help hiring, initial unemployment claims, and consumer attitudes toward the ease of finding work, registered monthly improvements. Monthly government employment reports, weekly initial claims, the Challenger Gray layoff report, and private reports like the Conference Board report are all relatively consistent in their opinion that the employment market is improving.
Strong Economic Numbers Have Included Some Good Luck, for a Change The U.S economic data have looked relatively strong this fall reflecting better economic conditions but also reflecting a measure of good luck. That is in direct contrast to this spring, when an ugly combination of bad weather, a surge in gasoline prices (due to the Arab Spring), and supply-chain interruptions due to the Japanese tsunami hit U.S. economic statistics very hard.     I would refrain from getting too excited about GDP growth that accelerated from 0.4% in the first quarter to potentially as much as 3% in the fourth quarter. For example, the U.S. tax code includes a provision for accelerated depreciation that expires on Dec. 31, 2011. This is certainly helping auto sales and perhaps the market for some capital equipment.  Employment numbers were helped a bit last month by a huge jump in retail employment as retailers focused on longer store hours to help generate additional sales. Those employees are likely to go away in January and February. Unusually warm weather and lack of snow in key parts of the country have also been a boon to most holiday shopping (cold weather clothing is a notable laggard, though).     A combination of slowing European growth and a glut of oil in the central U.S. have also pulled in gasoline prices--at least in the U.S.--faster than anyone would have guessed a few months ago. Changes in pipeline configurations early next year may reverse at least some of the overly favorable supply situation. Even excluding these factors, I still believe the U.S. is doing better than most of the rest of the developed world--just not as well as some of the data suggest.     On Deck: News on Price, Retail Sales, and Manufacturing In my opinion, the most important news next week is likely to be the inflation reports for both consumers and producers. Recall that prices on both the producer level and the consumer level were down for the month of October, breaking a trend of large increases for most of the year.     Overall, prices are expected to be flat for November, led by decreases in food and energy prices. Excluding those two items, prices are still likely to be up a very modest 0.1% for the month (1.2% annualized). It will be interesting to see whether holiday-related discounts--which seem unusually large this year--will have much effect on the CPI. Clothing and TVs are two categories that seem particularly under pressure. While the short-term news is great, prices are likely to show a 3.4% increase from last year. That's lower than the 3.9% level we saw in September, but still higher than I'd like to see. Full-year inflation for 2011, measured December to December, is likely to show even more improvement, perhaps to the 3.2% level. For 2012, my expectation is that inflation could slow to 2% or less based on lower energy and commodity prices.     Slowing Retail Sales Represents Less Inflation, Lower Gasoline Prices Retail sales are expected to grow 0.3% (3.6% annualized) in the Census Bureau's comprehensive report of retail and restaurant sales. That's a little lower than the 0.5% level of the prior month. Given the large discounts offered in November and lower gasoline prices, the slower rate is a function of pricing and not volumes. Also, some of the weekly retail data that I look at suggest that early November was slower and growth accelerated into the last two weeks of the month. That type of pattern should bode well for December, which got off to a good start during the first week, according the International Council of Shopping Centers.     November Industrial Production to Slow After Auto-Induced Spike in October Industrial production grew a very healthy 0.7% in October, recovering from an almost flat period in both August and September. Although almost every category showed some growth, autos and the transit sector were outsize gainers in October that may not grow as fast as in November. Also, supply chain issues--from Thailand, this time--may affect some U.S. manufacturers of information-processing equipment. Therefore, the consensus view is that industrial production will come back down to earth in November to a more modest 0.2%. Based on an improvement in the national purchasing managers report, I suspect November's industrial production report could beat the 0.2% consensus by a little.     Next week, two of the major regional purchasing managers reports, Philly Fed and Empire State, are likely to show at least some improvement. Both reports have been volatile lately and often move in opposite directions. I wouldn't read much into either of these reports unless the moves are relatively large and in the same direction. Only the Chicago PMI, which is issued a day before the national report, seems to have much predictive power. |
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krisluke
Supreme |
11-Dec-2011 19:11
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Arab Monetary Fund says unlikely to offer aid to Europe
ABU DHABI, Dec 11 (Reuters) - The Arab Monetary Fund is unlikely to offer any funding assistance to the euro zone because providing loans to unrest-hit countries across the Arab world has priority, Director General Jassim al-Mannai said on Sunday.
  " There is a big need in Arab countries, a constant need, taking into account the Arab Spring," he told reporters on the sidelines of a meeting of regional bankers in the United Arab Emirates' capital.   " Also, oil prices may drop because of weak economic growth...I cannot see Arab countries could help Europe."   European Union leaders agreed at a summit in Brussels on Friday that euro zone states and other nations should provide up to 200 billion euros ($270 billion) in bilateral loans to the International Monetary Fund to help it tackle the zone's debt crisis. They envisaged 50 billion euros of the total coming from non-euro countries, but it is not clear which nations would be willing to provide the money.   The 22-member AMF provided loans worth around $548 million to Jordan, Morocco and Yemen in 2010, the highest level of annual lending in the last 22 years, its annual report shows.   Egypt said last month it would receive financing worth $470 million from the AMF this year after its budget deficit ballooned in the wake of the February uprising that unseated president Hosni Mubarak.   The total value of loans extended by the AMF reached $6.1 billion at the end of 2010, while total assets stood at 3.1 billion Arab Accounting Dinars, or $14.5 billion.   In addition to going through the AMF, wealthy Gulf governments often extend international aid on a bilateral basis and could potentially do so to help Europe. But the governments have not so far pledged any fresh money to the IMF or euro zone.     TRADE   Mannai also said the AMF did not expect any negative impact on trade between Arab countries and Europe due to the euro zone debt crisis.   " Trade is going on. We cannot see a strong linkage of sovereign debt and trade between Europe and the Arab world. We should not expect any implications on trade," he said.   Although Europe is a big trading partner of the Arab world, many Arab countries have diversified their trade to other regions, he said.   Some 27 percent of imports to Saudi Arabia, the largest Arab economy, came from the European Union in October, while the EU was the destination for 10 percent of the kingdom's non-oil exports, official Saudi data show. (Reporting by Stanley Carvalho Additional reporting by Martin Dokoupil in Dubai Editing by Andrew Torchia) |
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krisluke
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11-Dec-2011 19:09
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China says already part of effort to help Europe
China's Deputy Foreign Minister Fu addresses reporters during a news conference in Athens
  " China will be part of the international effort to help Europe. We've done a lot, we have been so much in it, Europeans know it," she told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in Vienna. Asked how China would help, she said:   " We want to invest, we are importing more, we are sending delegations to buy, to purchase, that will help create jobs, that will help stimulate the economy.   " China will continue to be part of the effort because we are interrelated, interdependent. We are in it together. We are in one boat," she said.   As the owner of the world's largest foreign exchange reserves, China is one of the few governments with pockets deep enough to buy a sizeable portion of European government debt and help pull the region from its economic malaise.   Supporters of this idea say China would help itself if it assisted the euro zone, because it would allow Beijing to diversify its reserves from the dollar and foster economic growth in China's biggest export market.   China has been cool to such suggestions and has not committed publicly to contributing to Europe's bailout fund, despite being courted by the fund's chief last month.   Fu said in Vienna that idea of China giving " aid" to Europe was often misunderstood.   " When it is translated into Chinese it sounds like development aid and that is not what we are talking about," she told a panel discussion.   " The kind of thing we want to do is to be part of the effort to stimulate the economy," she said, adding that China hoped to increase its imports from Europe next year.   " China has 120 million people living on one dollar a day so it is not the kind of country rich enough to talk about saving others. It doesn't mean that China is trying to stay away from this global effort...we are all interdependent," she said.   (Reporting by Sylvia Westall Editing by David Cowell) |
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krisluke
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11-Dec-2011 19:08
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U.S. military chief eyes euro zone fallout risks
* Severe euro zone crisis could impact F-35 program
  * Dempsey eyes potential for civil unrest   * " The euro zone is at great risk" - Dempsey   By Phil Stewart   WASHINGTON, Dec 9 (Reuters) - The top U.S. military officer said on Friday he believed the euro zone was at great risk and warned that any breakup could have consequences for the Pentagon, even threatening its top weapons program.   General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he met U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke for two hours last week following a half-day visit to the Fed in New York last month.   His comments appeared to partly reflect what he learned in those sessions, part of an effort by Dempsey to get up to speed on global economic issues likely to shape his decisions as chairman - a post he assumed in September.   " The euro zone is at great risk," Dempsey told an event hosted by the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based think tank.   " I know that they've taken some measures here with the 17 members of the euro zone to try to better align - and I guess that's the right phrase - monetary and fiscal policy. But it's unclear, to me at least, that that will be the glue that actually holds it together."   Global stocks rebounded and the euro rose on Friday after nearly all European Union leaders agreed to build a closer fiscal union to address the region's debilitating debt crisis. It was unclear if Dempsey was aware of the accord when he made his remarks.   A four-star general with a master's degree in English, Dempsey acknowledged he was no expert on economics and it is rare for a chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to comment so extensively on economic issues.   But Dempsey suggested part of his concern was that the U.S. military could be exposed to any unraveling of the euro zone. " I mean (exposed) literally, through contracts and programmatics, but also because of the potential for civil unrest and the breakup of the union that has been forged over there," he said.   He did not elaborate on concerns about civil unrest but experts cite the potential for riots, shortages and bank runs in the event of a euro zone breakup. The United States' militaryhas more than 80,000 troops in Europe and more than 20,000 civilian employees.   Dempsey pointed to the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the Pentagon's costliest weapons program, which the United States is developing together with partners including Britain and Italy. A crisis in Europe, if it were serious enough, could force allies to re-allocate spending which had been earmarked for the F-35, he said.   That, in turn, could drive up the cost of individual U.S. aircraft at a time when U.S. defense budgets are squeezed.   " It will clearly put them at risk if all the economic predictions about a potential collapse were to occur - inflation, devaluation," Dempsey said.   " Obviously they'd have to make some national decisions about reallocation of resources that would, could potentially affect the JSF." (Editing by Todd Eastham) |
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krisluke
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11-Dec-2011 19:06
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Wall St rallies on EU deal but concerns linger
By Angela Moon
  NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks rallied on Friday, finishing the week higher after European Union leaders agreed on a plan to toughen the region's budget rules to help restore market confidence after a two-year sovereign debt crisis.   The agreement went some way to address the structural problems behind the bloc's debt crisis, but investors said more was now needed to relieve stress in the region's troubled debt markets .   " The fiscal agreement will help, but not for long," said George Feiger, chief executive of Contango Capital Advisors based in San Francisco.   " There is no happy ending to the situation. There are just solutions that are not horrible," he said.   Equities had risen in anticipation of a plan, with the S& P 500 up 6.5 percent since late November. But Wall Street tumbled on Thursday after the European Central Bank dashed hopes for additional bond buying.   There are investors who believe the ECB will eventually have to commit to bigger purchases of euro zone sovereign debt to shore up the battered market.   At least part of Friday's rally was a snap-back from the previous session's losses, traders said.   The Dow Jones industrial average ended up 186.56 points, or 1.55 percent, at 12,184.26. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was up 20.84 points, or 1.69 percent, at 1,255.19. The Nasdaq Composite Index rose 50.47 points, or 1.94 percent, at 2,646.85.   For the week, the Dow rose 1.4 percent, the S& P gained 0.9 percent and the Nasdaq was up 0.8 percent.   Banks, which have been pressured by the uncertainty over Europe, rallied after the EU summit. Bank of America Corp rose 2.3 percent to $5.72, while JPMorgan Chase & Co added 3 percent to $33.18. The Financial Select Sector SPDR rose 2 percent.   In the latest sign of resilience in the U.S. economy, consumer sentiment rose to its highest level in six months in early December on signs of a better jobs market and an improving economy, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan .   The EU summit failed to secure changes to the EU treaty among all the member countries and investors warned the move was far from a panacea. Indications suggest the region is sliding into a recession and questions about how to bring down high sovereign debt yields are still unanswered.   Goldman Sachs suggested that investors short German equities through the benchmark DAX index in a note to clients published late on Thursday.   " The European summit seems focused on a set of future priorities for increased fiscal risk sharing and the outlining of some of the needed elements of a new fiscal arrangement, but looks to have little to say about alleviating proximate stresses in Greece and Italy and the European banking system more generally," Goldman said.   Still, Italian bonds reversed losses, with traders citing frequent European Central Bank forays into Italian debt markets throughout the day.   Traders also said " fast money" accounts were covering short positions in bonds of so-called peripheral EU countries.   Some caution signals were sent by major U.S. companies. DuPont and Co fell 3.1 percent to $45.04 after the Dow component cut its 2011 profit outlook, citing slower growth in some businesses.   Texas Instruments Inc cut its revenue outlook for the current quarter, warning of lower demand. The stock ended flat at $29.94.   Trading volume was 6.71 billion shares on the New York Stock Exchange, NYSE Amex and Nasdaq, below the year's daily average of around 7.95 billion shares.   Advancing stocks outnumbered declining ones by a ratio of 6 to 1 on the NYSE, while on the Nasdaq, advancers beat decliners by a ratio of 5 to 1. |
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victortan
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10-Dec-2011 02:04
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I beg to differ. Next 3 quater US will be in recession as predicted by the fame ECRI. So if you do not take advantage of this rally, then  it will be  along time, but i will be shorting big time. Late Jan.
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Juzztrade
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10-Dec-2011 00:29
Yells: "Techincal and long term investor" |
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Hi Ak_Francis Welcome back!  Still staying in TW?
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