Archive for the 'The Markets' Category

World oil price hits new high

From AFP Via Rawstory:

World oil reached a new record price near 121 dollars a barrel as concerns over the United States economy eased, analysts said Tuesday.

New York’s main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for June delivery, reached an all-time high of 120.93 dollars a barrel during Asian hours before dropping back in late afternoon trade when it was three cents lower at 119.94 dollars a barrel.

The contract crashed through the symbolic 120-dollar ceiling for the first time on Monday and closed at a record 119.97 dollars on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Brent North Sea crude for June delivery was 24 cents higher at 118.23 dollars a barrel, after settling at a record 117.99 dollars on Monday in London. The contract had earlier hit an intra-day high of 118.58 dollars.

Oil futures prices on both sides of the Atlantic have nearly doubled in a year and have continued to soar since the benchmark New York contract broke through 100 dollars at the start of 2008.

Latest US economic data have given oil prices a fresh boost, said Victor Shum, senior principal at Purvin and Gertz energy consultancy in Singapore.

On Monday, the Institute of Supply Management said its index for the vast US service sector rose to 52 percent in April, above the level of 50 that means expansion, and better than expected by private analysts.

That report followed official data on Friday which showed that the US economy shed 20,000 jobs in April, far fewer than the 75,000 expected by the market.

 

Article Continues @ Sourced Site.

Big Investors See Recession, Wall Street Depression

From CNBC: 

The U.S. economy may be in a funk, but that’s nothing compared with the pall hanging over Wall Street.

Some of the biggest U.S. investors said on Tuesday they expected the nation’s economy to get worse, but then work its way toward recovery later this year.

On Wall Street, however, the road back to health will take much longer.”

It is the Great Depression on Wall Street. It sure isn’t on Main Street,” Ken Griffin, chief executive of hedge fund Citadel Investment Group, said during a panel at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California.

According to Griffin and other top U.S. investors at the conference, the credit and housing crises that led to hundreds of billions of dollars in losses for Wall Street firms will take those investment banks years to claw back from.

“Until you see Wall Street put on their party hats again and get on the tables and start dancing is going to be years,” said Ken Moelis, a former UBS banker who now runs his own investment firm, Moelis & Company.

“It will be a long time for Wall Street to come back to where it was.” Leon Black, billionaire investor and founding partner of hedge fund Apollo Advisors, said the banking system has been “broken” since last summer and has fostered a credit crisis “the likes of which I’ve never seen in the 30 years I’ve been in the business.”

 Notwithstanding that, however, Moelis said he did not expect to see “a deep Main Street recession.” In parts of the country, such as Pittsburgh, he said, business is booming thanks to soaring prices on commodities such as steel.

 

Article Continues @ Sourced Site. 

Updated: Oil strikes new record near $120

From The International Herald Tribune:

 PERTH: Oil struck a record high at $119.93 a barrel on Monday, extending the previous session’s rally, as a strike closed a major oil pipeline and as new violence in Nigeria reignited supply fears.

 

Simmering tensions between the United States and Iran also helped boost oil prices.

 

U.S. light crude for June delivery rose 88 cents to $119.40 by 2324 GMT, after striking a lifetime high of $119.93 a barrel shortly after electronic trading resumed after the weekend.

 

London Brent crude rose 66 cents to $117.

 

“Supply side concerns underpinned the oil price,” David Moore, a commodity strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said in a note to clients.

 

“Oil supplies from Nigeria have been disrupted by militant attacks and a strike by some oil workers. A strike at the Grangemouth refinery in Scotland has caused significant disruption to supplies from the North Sea,” he said.

 

The 700,000 barrels per day (bpd) Fortis pipeline, which carries nearly half of Britain’s oil, was closed on Sunday as a strike over pensions began at the neighbouring 210,000 bpd Grangemouth refinery in Scotland, operator BP said.

 

The refinery, owned by international chemical company Ineos, produces a tenth of Britain’s petrol and diesel but also supplies vital steam and power to BP’s Kinneil plant that processes the crude oil coming ashore from 70 North Sea fields.

 

The government has said that there will be no overall shortages of fuel but conceded that there may be some local supply problems, particularly in Scotland and northern England. 

 

Article Continues @ Sourced Site

Falling stocks push oil to $112

From The BBC:

 The price of a barrel of oil reached a record high on Wednesday in New York after a US government report showed an unexpected decline in oil supplies.

 

US light sweet crude oil jumped nearly $4 to a record of $112.21 a barrel.

 

Earlier, in London, Brent crude also hit a record price, rising $1.94 a barrel to $108.28.

 

Traders were surprised by the Energy Information Administration’s report, which showed crude stocks had fallen 3.2 million barrels in a week.

 

Analysts had expected an increase of 2.4 million barrels.

 

The fall in stock levels sparked concern so close to the start of the summer driving season in the US when demand for fuel rises.

 

This traditionally begins on Memorial Day at the end of May, when Americans take their cars on holiday.

 

But analysts suggest the rising price of fuel may mean motorists fill up their tanks less often.

 

“People are cutting back on gasoline purchases because the economy is squeezing them right now,” said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading in Chicago.

 

The US Energy Department has suggested the price of gas may reach $4 a gallon by the summer. American drivers currently pay $3.34 a gallon on average.

 

Weaker dollar

 Article Continues @ Sourced Site

Soros calls financial crisis worst since Great Depression, sees more market declines

From BloggingStocks:

Billionaire investor George Soros believes the current financial crisis is the worst since the Great Depression, and said stocks have not bottomed yet, Bloomberg News reported Thursday.

Soros said the most recent market bottom “will probably not prove to be the final bottom,” adding that the current stock rebound will last six weeks to three months as the United States moves closer to recession, Bloomberg News reported.

Further, Soros, in an op-editorial column in The Financial Times, argued that the cause of the market’s current problems is a flawed premise: the belief that markets are self-correcting and tend toward equilibrium. They aren’t and don’t, Soros argues, and the laissez-faire policy creates bubbles, including the most-recent housing bubble, which, in turn, when it started to burst, led to the current credit crunch.

Soros cites deregulation

Article Continues @ Sourced Site.

The Gentlemen’s Bailout-Opinion

The Nation

The Federal Reserve’s announcement of an open-ended bail-out for Wall Street’s endangered financial firms and banks opens an ominous new chapter in what might be called “market socialism with American characteristics.” If Washington tries to do something for “losers” who are ordinary citizens, financial titans complain about violating free-market principles. When the titans themselves are going down, they rush to their patrons at the central bank and demand extraordinary relief. Government must save the big money, we are told, for the overall good of the economy. Thus, the financial system’s reckless losses–approaching $1 trillion but probably far more–are being “socialized,” dumped on the public, the very people victimized by its snares and falsified valuations.

Put aside the obvious hypocrisy and greed. This nation is on the brink of a historic catastrophe. It requires emergency responses from the federal government on a scale not seen since the Great Depression and the New Deal, the subject of this special issue. Yet the rescue party is composed of the same people who co-wrote this disaster. They are, first, the financiers who indulged their own appetites for extreme wealth and enlarged a financial system of esoteric fakery that inflated prices and profits. Second, the close collaborators were the Federal Reserve and other authorities who blessed this dangerous concoction and declined to enforce prudential standards. MORE

We can afford to bail out these investment banks but we don’t have the money to finance SCHIP? Do I have that right? I realize to a neocon that makes perfect sense. To me it means these people need to be measured for straight jackets!

Or a special place in hell.

~Susan~

Tibet and Taiwan’s Up Coming Presidential Election

From Kuro5hin:Mon Mar 17, 2008 at 02:14:11 AM EST 

“Asia’s governments come in two broad varieties: young fragile democracies–and older, fragile authoritarian regimes.” - Paul A. SamuelsonSince Taiwan, the “democratic entity” also known as the Republic of China, claims reluctant sovereignty over the territory of Tibet also, this weekend’s uprising in Lhasa has been of particular interest to us here in this “rebel province.” The Tibetan uprising is also of serious concern here because next week’s (03/22) crucial presidential contest, between pro-unification Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) leader Ma Ying-jeou and the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) candidate Frank Hsieh, could easily be turn upside down by China’s current actions in the “Tibetan Autonomous Region.”

Story Comtinues @ Sourced Site.

Oil rises to new record as dollar drops

From AP Via Yahoo:

SINGAPORE - Oil prices jumped to an all-time trading high Monday in Asia as the tumbling U.S. dollar and plunging stock markets prompted investors to seek shelter in commodities.

Investors fled the dollar after a surprise move by the U.S. Federal Reserve on Sunday to provide cash to financially squeezed Wall Street investment houses pushed the battered greenback deeper into multiyear lows against the yen.

“The Fed’s move overall will help the liquidity of the U.S. dollar, and that will really further soften the dollar,” said Victor Shum, an energy analyst with Purvin & Gertz in Singapore. “Meanwhile, investors seem to be just following the mantra of buying oil and commodities to hedge against the falling dollar and inflation.”

Light, sweet crude for April delivery spiked to a record $111.42 a barrel — up $1.21 from Friday’s close — in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange midmorning in Singapore. It later slipped back to $111.08 a barrel around midday.

The contract’s previous high was set Thursday at $111 a barrel. It fell 12 cents to settle at $110.21 a barrel on Friday.

Analysts blame the weak dollar for oil’s recent rally. Crude futures offer a hedge against a falling dollar, and oil futures bought and sold in dollars are more attractive to foreign investors when the dollar is weak.

Interest rate cuts in the U.S. further weaken the dollar and have helped drive oil’s rise. In an extraordinary weekend move, the Fed cut its discount rate on Sunday by 25 basis points to 3.25 percent. The Fed is also expected to cut the benchmark federal funds rate at its regularly scheduled monetary policy meeting on Tuesday.

“The inverse link between the dollar and oil prices seem to be strengthening. While we have new records for oil almost daily now, we’re also seeing daily new record lows for the dollar,” Shum said.

Shum said the surge in investor demand for commodities as a hedge against inflation has created a self-fulfilling cycle that causes prices to keep rising.

“When there is more liquidity, it will raise inflation. So investors pump more money into oil as a hedge, and that further fuels inflation,” he said. “It points to the risk in the oil market that the fundamentals don’t really support such continual strengthening in pricing.”

Equities investors also sought refuge from Asian stocks, which declined sharply Monday after the stunning collapse of Bear Stearns Cos., one of the world’s largest investment banks.

Story Continues @ Sourced Site.

Background:  See regularly updated (*Foreign) feed from CNBC  for latest Finacial Numbers.

*Foreign feed at time of posting.

Oil hits record 100.10 dollars

From AFP via Rawstory:

The price of oil in New York spiked to a record 100.10 dollars a barrel Tuesday on supply concerns.

The price for a barrel of light, sweet crude, eclipsed the record set in January of 100.09 dollars a barrel.

The market rallied amid speculation that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which supplies about 40 percent of the world’s oil, would cut output at its March 5 meeting in Vienna, analysts said.

Story Continues @ Sourced Site.

Will the Cure be Worse than the Disease?

From CNNMoney:By Shawn Tully, editor at large

(Fortune Magazine) — The wobbly economy is overtaking Iraq as the issue weighing most heavily on the minds of America’s voters. And Washington has noticed. The White House and Congress are almost certain to enact some kind of stimulus package. But like all such temporary, feel-good measures, it will generate a quick blip in growth that will quickly evaporate. In reality only one player has the power to do anything swift and decisive: the Federal Reserve. And its chairman, Ben Bernanke, has already made his intentions abundantly clear. Unfortunately, the cure he’s prescribing may be worse than the disease.

Just how low will the economy go? There are conflicting signals. It’s clear that the economy is losing steam. The plummeting value of America’s houses is chilling consumer spending, layoffs are mounting, and banks and other creditors burned by the subprime crisis are far more reluctant to lend to everyone from small-business owners to private equity firms. But GDP increased by 4.9% in the third quarter, and economists estimate that GDP was still growing in the fourth quarter. Exports are strong, thanks to the weak dollar. The Fed did a brilliant job last summer by flooding the banks with money to prevent a full-scale credit crunch. Credit is far more expensive today, but it’s also becoming more plentiful, as demonstrated by the falling rates on everything from LIBOR - the rate at which international banks lend to each other - to junk bonds. So while a recession is a real possibility, it’s not inevitable - even the Fed is not forecasting one this year. And if we do get one, it may be brief and shallow, like the one we had in 2001 - with economic growth falling by perhaps half a percentage point for a couple of quarters, and unemployment rising from its current 5% to 5.5% or 6%.

By cutting rates early and often, Bernanke is acting as though a recession - even a mild one - would be a calamity that must be avoided at all costs. He has already reduced the Fed funds rate (which banks pay when they borrow from each other) by one point, to 4.25%, and promises to “take substantive additional action as needed to support growth,” a pledge that Wall Street interprets as meaning at least another half-point cut at the Fed’s meeting on Jan. 29, if not sooner.Many on Wall Street back Bernanke. “I’ll defend the Fed,” says Bear Stearns chief economist David Malpass. “Part of the slowdown is the result of banks’ tightening credit, and you help that by lowering the Fed funds rate.” Mickey Levy of Bank of America agrees: “You need to lower rates to offset the drag on housing.”

But Bernanke is setting the stage for an even bigger recession down the road. Just as the ultra-low rates of the early 2000s created many of the problems we’re experiencing today, pumping money into the system would probably stoke inflation, forcing the Fed to hike rates sharply in the near future. “It’s better to take a small recession and kill inflation immediately instead of facing high inflation and a really big recession later,” says Carnegie Mellon economist Allan Meltzer.

Meltzer, who is finishing the second volume of his history of the Federal Reserve, warns that Bernanke is risking a disastrous replay of the 1970s, when high oil prices fueled double-digit inflation. Every time the Fed started to tighten and unemployment jumped, chairmen G. William Miller and Arthur Burns lost their nerve. They lowered rates to boost job growth, and inflation inevitably revived, causing a vicious price spiral. The Fed let the disease rage for so long that it took draconian action by chairman Paul Volcker in the early 1980s to finally defeat inflation. The price was a deep recession, with unemployment hitting 11% in 1982. “The mentality is the same as in the 1970s,” says Meltzer.

“‘As soon as we get rid of the risk of recession, we’ll do something about inflation.’ But that comes too late.”

Indeed, while the economy is sending mixed messages about growth, the signs of increasing inflation are flashing bright red. For 2007 the consumer price index rose 4.1%, the biggest annual increase in 17 years. Gold, historically a reliable harbinger of inflation, set an all-time high of more than $900 an ounce. The dollar is languishing at a record low against the euro and a weighted basket of international currencies. “Flooding the market with liquidity is a disaster for the purchasing power of the dollar,” says David Gitlitz, chief economist for Trend Macrolytics.

The Fed’s supporters tend to downplay those dangers. They contend that the inflation surge is being driven largely by energy costs. Since oil isn’t likely to rise from its near-$100 level, inflation is likely to tail off in 2008. “That argument is wrong,” says Brian Wesbury, chief economist with First Trust Portfolios, an asset-management firm. “As people spend less to drive to the golf course, they will spend the extra money on golf clubs or other products. The Fed wants to reflate the economy, so the money that went into higher oil prices will drive up the prices of other goods.”

Fed supporters also point out that the yield on ten-year Treasury bonds stands at just 3.8%, a figure that implies that investors expect inflation to be around 2% in future years. So if inflation is really expected to rage, why aren’t interest rates far higher? The explanation is twofold. First, government bonds are hardly a foolproof forecaster. For example, five years ago Treasury yields were predicting 2% inflation over the next five years, and the actual figure was 3%, or 50% higher. Second, investors are so skittish about most stocks and corporate bonds that they’re paying a huge premium for safe investments, chiefly U.S. Treasuries. “It’s all about a flight to safety,” says Meltzer. Stand by for a major rise in yields as the reality of looming inflation sinks in.

So what is the right course for the Fed? Bernanke should hold the Fed funds rate exactly where it is now, at 4.25%. Standing pat might well push the economy into a recession. But the Fed’s newfound vigilance on inflation would boost the dollar, effectively lowering the prices of oil and other imports. America would suffer a short downturn and restore price stability, paving the way to a strong recovery in 2010 or 2011. -More>




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