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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:07 AM
Original message
STOCK MARKET WATCH, Thursday February 14
Source: du

STOCK MARKET WATCH, Thursday February 14, 2008

COUNTING THE DAYS
DAYS REMAINING IN THE * REGIME 342

DAYS SINCE DEMOCRACY DIED (12/12/00) 2580 DAYS
WHERE'S OSAMA BIN-LADEN? 2306 DAYS
DAYS SINCE ENRON COLLAPSE = 2597
Number of Enron Execs in handcuffs = 19
ENRON EXECS CONVICTED = 10
Enron execs conveniently deceased = 3
Other Arrests of Execs = 54



U.S. FUTURES & MARKETS INDICATORS
NASDAQ FUTURES-----------------------------S&P FUTURES





AT THE CLOSING BELL WHEN BUSH TOOK OFFICE on January 22, 2001
Dow - 10,578.24
Nasdaq - 2,757.91
S&P 500 - 1,342.90
Oil - $27.69/bbl
Gold - $266.70/oz.


AT THE CLOSING BELL ON February 13, 2008

Dow... 12,552.24 +178.83 (+1.45%)
Nasdaq... 2,373.93 +53.89 (+2.32%)
S&P 500... 1,367.21 +18.35 (+1.36%)
Gold future... 910.20 -0.90 (-0.10%)
30-Year Bond 4.51% +0.05 (+1.08%)
10-Yr Bond... 3.69% +0.02 (+0.41%)






GOLD, EURO, YEN, Loonie and Silver



PIEHOLE ALERT

Heads Up!
Preliminary info on appearances by Bush & Co. throughout the country. Details & links are added as they become available so check back. And if you know more, are organizing something, or would like to, contact actionpost@legitgov.org

For information on protests and other actions Citizens For Legitimate Government









Read more: du
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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:15 AM
Response to Original message
1. Market WrapUp: The Bad News Shows No Sign of Abating
BY MICHAEL PANZNER

This morning, the Census Bureau announced that advance retail & food services sales for January rose by 0.3%, far outpacing the consensus call for a 0.3% decline. Excluding motor vehicles and parts dealers sales (“ex-autos”), the gain was 0.3%, also better than the 0.2% increase that was expected. Bullish equity traders and TV pundits pounced on the news.

However, if you look at the longer-term trend, today’s data offers no cause for comfort in terms of how the beleaguered U.S. consumer is doing. Year-on-year, retail sales (ex-autos) recently hit a four-month low of 4.9%; if annual inflation of 4.1% is taken into account (based on the most recent CPI data, which most analysts believe is understated), the yearly sales gain is marginal, at best.

But even that series makes the retail picture look far better than it really is. When you subtract out gasoline station sales, which have undoubtedly been boosted by rising prices for fuel, the year-on-year change is 2.6%, the lowest since April 2003. Indeed, gasoline station sales as a percentage of retail sales (ex-auto) recently hit a record high of 13.1% versus a median rate of 9.8% since January 1992.

http://www.financialsense.com/Market/wrapup.htm
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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:18 AM
Response to Original message
2. Today's Reports
8:30 AM Initial Claims 02/09
Briefing Forecast 360K
Market Expects 350K
Prior 356K

8:30 AM Trade Balance Dec
Briefing Forecast -$62.0B
Market Expects -$61.5B
Prior -$63.1B

http://biz.yahoo.com/c/e.html
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UpInArms Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 08:39 AM
Response to Reply #2
13. Initial Claims in at 348,000 - last wk rev'd up 1k - U.S. 2007 trade gap with China record $256.3 bl
02. U.S. 4-wk. avg. continuing jobless claims up 3,500
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

03. U.S. continuing jobless claims down 9,000 to 2.76 million
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

04. U.S. 4-wk. avg. initial jobless claims up 12,000 to 347,250
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

05. U.S. weekly initial jobless claims fall 9,000 to 348,000
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

06. U.S. 2007 trade gap with China record $256.3 bln
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

07. U.S. '2007 trade gap narrows by most since 1991
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

08. U.S. 2007 trade gap $711.6 bln, down 6.2% from '06
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

09. U.S. Dec. trade gap with China $18.8 bln vs $18.9 bln yr-ago
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

10. U.S. Dec. trade gap below consensus of $61.5 bln
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 5 minutes ago

11. U.S. Dec trade gap narrows 6.9% to $58.8 bln
8:30 AM ET, Feb 14, 2008 - 6 minutes ago
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modrepub Donating Member (484 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 08:55 AM
Response to Reply #13
14. Job Claims
It's good news no matter what..Job claims go up...YEA we get an interest rate cut!...Job claims go down...YEA we get more spending. I swear the Wall Street crowd is doing every thing in their power to keep things together before Bush gets out! Never in my life have I seen so many people cover for such an idiot!
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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:20 AM
Response to Original message
3.  Oil steadies at $93 after slight rise
SINGAPORE - Oil prices were steady Thursday after rising moderately in the previous session, supported by Wall Street's overnight rise and threats to U.S. oil supplies.

Wall Street rallied Wednesday after the U.S. Commerce Department said retail sales rose unexpectedly last month. Energy investors often view the equity market as a barometer of economic health, worrying that any slowdown in growth will lead to a corresponding slump in energy demand.

Traders also remain concerned about Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's threat to halt oil sales to the United States in response to Exxon Mobil Corp.'s bid to freeze billions of dollars in Venezuelan assets. Exxon Mobil is challenging the nationalization of its Venezuelan oil ventures in U.S. and European courts.
.....

Light, sweet crude for March delivery rose 16 cents to $93.43 a barrel in Asian electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange by midafternoon in Singapore.

The contract rose 49 cents to settle at $93.27 a barrel on Wednesday.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/oil_prices
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 01:13 PM
Response to Reply #3
38. Oil surges on supply worries, economic data
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices soared $1.50 to near $95 a barrel on Thursday, supported by supply concerns and better-than-expected economic data from the United States and Japan, the largest and third-largest oil consumers.

Refinery snags and Venezuela's move to halt sales to Exxon Mobil in the midst of a legal dispute stoked the price run-up.

"A number of supply-driven factors have reminded the market of how thin spare capacity of production really is -- Nigeria, North Sea glitches and geopolitical tension," said Harry Tchilinguirian of BNP Paribas.

"Added to that, positive surprises in U.S. retail sales and Japanese GDP growth last quarter, and equities and oil markets are better oriented."

U.S. crude rose $1.54 to $94.81 a barrel by 1712 GMT, after rising as high as $95.44 -- the highest level since Jan. 10. Brent crude gained $1.51 to $94.83 a barrel.

/... http://africa.reuters.com/energyandoil/news/usnN14460223.html?rpc=401&
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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:33 AM
Response to Original message
4. h/t to UpInArms for this one
Debt crisis spreads to US municipalities

A collapse in confidence in a $330bn corner of the debt market has left US municipalities and student loan providers facing spiralling interest rate costs.

The implosion of the so-called auction-rate securities market - amid worries that bond insurers guaranteeing much of this debt could face rating downgrades - is the latest incarnation of the credit crisis.

The market, heavily used by municipal borrowers and backed by triple-A rated guarantees from bond insurers such as Ambac and MBIA (NYSE:MBI), was until now used as a safe harbour for investors.

The interest rates on such bonds reset either weekly or monthly and a lack of interest from investors can trigger a sharp rise to compensate holders.

The market's sudden slump has pushed interest rates as high as 20 per cent for entities from the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey to a hospital.

"The auction securities market is falling apart," said David Cooke, chief financial officer at Park Nicollet Heath Services in Minneapolis.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ft/20080214/bs_ft/fto021320082104388221
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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:38 AM
Response to Reply #4
5.  Bond insurer woes could become market tsunami: Spitzer
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The bond insurer problem must be fixed, or else it could become a "financial tsunami" that wreaks havoc on the broader economy, New York Governor Eliot Spitzer is due to tell the U.S. Congress on Thursday.

A copy of Spitzer's prepared testimony was obtained by Reuters on Wednesday.

New York State Insurance Superintendent Eric Dinallo is working with banks on rescue plans for several bond insurers, which guarantee more than $2.4 trillion of debt and are expected to suffer big losses from insuring bonds linked to subprime mortgages and other risk assets.

Those losses threaten the top credit ratings that insurers need to win new business. If insurers are downgraded by ratings agencies, investors that can only hold top-rated bonds may have to sell billions of dollars of securities, lifting borrowing costs for cities and consumers alike.
.....

Regulators hope to help bond insurers keep their top credit ratings, but are also looking at protecting only the insurers' municipal bond insurance segments, Spitzer said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080214/bs_nm/usa_economy_spitzer_dc
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TalkAgain Donating Member (89 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 09:04 PM
Response to Reply #5
47. ......
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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:41 AM
Response to Original message
6.  Rally on Wall St seen to continue
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Stock index futures rose on Thursday, indicating the rally on Wall Street may continue for a fourth consecutive day as investors focused on fresh jobs data and kept a close eye on the struggling financial sector.

At 5:19 a.m. EST, Dow Jones futures were up 0.04 percent, S&P 500 futures rose 0.04 percent and Nasdaq futures traded 0.32 percent higher.

The indicative Dow Jones index (.DJII), which tracks how the Dow Jones stocks are traded in Frankfurt, was 0.17 percent higher.

"What we see is a correction of the correction. This a recovery and I think the market is stabilizing. But there is no reason for euphoria," said David Pieper, analyst at German state bank LBBW in Stuttgart.
.....

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson are due to testify on the state of the U.S. economy and financial markets before the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday, 10 a.m. EST.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080214/bs_nm/markets_stocks_dc
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radfringe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:55 AM
Response to Original message
7. ***FYI: Link to info on Rebate at IRS website
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Hugin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 10:18 AM
Response to Reply #7
18. I plan to blow mine on scratchers... uh, I mean EDUCATION.
Edited on Thu Feb-14-08 10:18 AM by Prag
;)


(Okay... Okay... Some of it will go to DU. :) )

P.S. Happy Valentine's Day.
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kineneb Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 01:51 PM
Response to Reply #7
40. won't get any
We don't file tax forms because we live off Hubby's SSDI. According to what I read, only those who claim some income and file a 2007 tax form are eligible.
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ozymandius Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:57 AM
Response to Original message
8. Totally Spent: by Robert B. Reich
WE’RE sliding into recession, or worse, and Washington is turning to the normal remedies for economic downturns. But the normal remedies are not likely to work this time, because this isn’t a normal downturn.

The problem lies deeper. It is the culmination of three decades during which American consumers have spent beyond their means. That era is now coming to an end. Consumers have run out of ways to keep the spending binge going.

The only lasting remedy, other than for Americans to accept a lower standard of living and for businesses to adjust to a smaller economy, is to give middle- and lower-income Americans more buying power — and not just temporarily.

Much of the current debate is irrelevant. Even with more tax breaks for business like accelerated depreciation, companies won’t invest in more factories or equipment when demand is dropping for products and services across the board, as it is now. And temporary fixes like a stimulus package that would give households a one-time cash infusion won’t get consumers back to the malls, because consumers know the assistance is temporary. The problems most consumers face are permanent, so they are likely to pocket the extra money instead of spending it.
.....

A larger earned-income tax credit, financed by a higher marginal income tax on top earners, is required. The tax credit functions like a reverse income tax. Enlarging it would mean giving workers at the bottom a bigger wage supplement, as well as phasing it out at a higher wage. The current supplement for a worker with two children who earns up to $16,000 a year is about $5,000. That amount declines as earnings increase and is eliminated at about $38,000. It should be increased to, say, $8,000 at the low end and phased out at an income of $46,000.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/13/opinion/13reich.html?_r=1&ref=todayspaper&oref=slogin
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antigop Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 10:20 AM
Response to Reply #8
19. How about companies giving raises to the worker bees instead of lining executive pockets? n/t
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 11:28 AM
Response to Reply #19
24. What Are You, Some Kind of SOCIALIST?
That's such a...such a...crazy idea, it just might work.

We can't have that! BushCo prides itself on failure!
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DemReadingDU Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 08:00 AM
Response to Original message
9. Healthcare fraud trial in Columbus, Ohio - Update
2/13/08 National Century exec: Colleagues cavalier with funding requests

Fearing potential liability, an insider at National Century Financial Enterprises Inc. hid copies of company documents in her basement, she testified Wednesday in the fraud trial for five company executives.

Jessica Bily, an associate vice president in National Century's funding department, told a U.S. District Court jury that during the last year before the Dublin company's 20002 collapse, she squirreled away eight years' worth of company documents at her home to protect herself and others in the department.

Bily joined National Century in 1994 and worked her way up from a data analysis job to become a vice president in charge of a department responsible for tracking funding advances the company made to clients. The government has alleged those advances were part of a fraud that triggered National Century's $3 billion downfall.

National Century bought accounts receivables from health-care providers at a discount in exchange for fast cash to the owners. It would then package the receivables as bonds and sell them to investors, while collecting on its customers' bills.

According to Bily, certain National Century executives, including the five on trial, would make funding requests on customers' behalf so National Century would send money over and above what it had paid for the customers' receivables. In each instance, Bily's department would generate an advance-request form that was to be signed by the executive authorizing the payment. Not all forms were signed, Bily said, because some executives refused.

One advance Bily cited was for $1.1 million, made from NPF VI Inc., a National Century fund the government has accused the executives of using to divert money for their benefit. Bily said at least one of the advance-request forms noted the method for recovery of the advance was "unknown."

more...
http://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/stories/2008/02/11/daily25.html

link to yesterday's article
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=102&topic_id=3180022&mesg_id=3180128
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 11:31 AM
Response to Reply #9
25. Fraud is fraud--and this is massive
got to go to single payer universal health care and stop this kind of thing dead.
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DemReadingDU Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 08:14 AM
Response to Original message
10. Healthcare fraud trial - The Back Story
Edited on Thu Feb-14-08 08:29 AM by DemReadingDU
2/13/08
In a surprise, National Century Financial Enterprises (NCFE) trial kickoff draws in the public
Ohio media pays attention to arcane fraud case that's likely to drag on for quite a while

One might think that the embarrassing if not ignoble collapse of what was once described as “the country’s largest provider of healthcare accounts-receivable financing” would only be of interest to some affected healthcare providers, accounting nerds and burned Wall Street investors. But the criminal trial of five former executives of National Century Financial Enterprises is actually front-page news in Columbus, Ohio, where the trial got under way last week in a U.S. District courtroom.

In fact, based on a story that ran on the front page of the Columbus Dispatch the Sunday before the trial, defense attorneys motioned last week to conduct individualized and comprehensive voir dire of the dozens if not hundreds of prospective jurors. Without one-on-one questioning to determine otherwise, the attorneys said they were concerned that the prominent media coverage might have contaminated the pool.

For those of you who did not work for one of the 275 healthcare providers that went belly up after NCFE’s collapse, or are not accountants, burned investors or Columbus-area residents, here’s the back story: NCFE purchased medical accounts receivable from providers typically in dire financial straits, raising capital by selling AAA-rated asset-backed bonds or notes to investors. Prosecutors are alleging that it was all a sham that eventually led to the November 2002 collapse of NCFE days after FBI agents raided its Dublin, Ohio, headquarters. They claim that the fraud cost investors more than $1.9 billion.

more...
http://www.modernhealthcare.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080213/FREE/472532246


Link to article in Sunday 2/3/08 Columbus Dispatch before the trial...
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=102&topic_id=3168377&mesg_id=3168470


edit for spacing



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TalkingDog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 08:14 AM
Response to Original message
11. Productivity Fluke.
the dish:

http://www.businessweek.com/the_thread/economicsunbound/archives/2008/02/bob_gordon_has.html?campaign_id=rss_blog_blogspotting


"The continuing decline in the productivity growth trend provides further evidence that the productivity growth revival of 1995-2004 was a one-time event. In the late 1990s the primary cause of the productivity growth revival was the dot.com boom and invention of the WWW. During 2001-03 the further good news on productivity growth was due to a combination of the delayed impact of the 1990s technology surge (the “intangible capital” hypothesis) with unusually savage corporate cost cutting that caused the prolonged decline in payroll employment between 2001 and 2003."

deconstructed- by somebody with a math brain:

http://inequalityusa.blogspot.com/


as far as I can tell, it means: Uh-Oh.


have a good one guys
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UpInArms Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 08:34 AM
Response to Original message
12. dollar watch
http://quotes.ino.com/chart/?s=NYBOT_DX&v=i

Last trade 76.200 Change -0.231 (-0.30%)

Strong Consumer Spending Drives Dollar Higher

http://www.dailyfx.com/story/bio1/Strong_Consumer_Spending_Drives_Dollar_1202941766615.html

The US dollar continued to rebound as consumer spending snapped back in the month of January, skirting a repeat of 2001. The market had expected a back to back decline in retail sales, but the last time this happened was 6 years ago. Since then, consumer spending has rebounded every month following a decline and this continued to remain the case in January. Retail sales increased 0.3 percent last month following a 0.4 percent drop. Excluding autos, sales were also up 0.3 percent thanks to increases in gasoline prices, stronger demand for clothing and health care. However not all businesses saw an acceleration in spending. Furniture, electronics, building equipment, sporting goods and department stores all reported sharp declines. The data was positive for the dollar against the Japanese Yen, but that was it. The dollar remained unchanged against the rest of the major currencies such as the Euro and British pound. Although the latest consumer spending number helped to alleviate concerns for a recession, retail sales is rising from low levels, which means that the US economy has yet to hit a bottom. Tomorrow the dollar’s momentum may continue with the trade balance due for release. Manufacturing PMI rebounded back into expansionary territory in the month of January which suggests that we may see an improvement in the trade deficit as well. Of course, the US economy is still not out of the woods because the service sector remains vulnerable. Morgan Stanley announced another round of job cuts and analysts are speculating that high mortgage rates will force the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates again. However expectations for another 50bp rate cut has decreased. The market is now only pricing in a 68 percent chance that the Fed will ease by 50 instead of 25, down from 80 percent yesterday.

...more...


Euro Firmer But Slowdown Concerns Persist; What Will Bernanke Say?

http://www.dailyfx.com/story/bio2/Euro_Firmer_But_Slowdown_Concerns_1202988547692.html

Currencies put in a relatively tame performance in Asian and early European trade today with high yielders attracting flows as risk appetite returned to the market. As we noted yesterday, ”If equity markets remain positive… the high yielders amongst the majors should continue to rally against the greenback as carry flows continue.” That’ s been the dominant theme for the past 24 hours as DJIA rallied by 178 points followed by a 558 point advance in the Nikkei.

Risk appetite though somewhat diminished is certainly back, as traders reassess the dire, doomsday views regarding the global economy that prevailed only a week ago. If the combination of aggressive rate cutting by the Fed along with the stimulus package passed by Congress, manages to forestall the possibility of a US recession, investor’s spirits are likely to improve considerably and the high yielders in the currency market should continue to perform well.

Nowhere was this sunny scenario more evident tonight than in the Australian dollar, whose economy continues to surprise to the upside. The red hot economy Down Under produced 26.8K new jobs – significantly more than the 15K projected – suggesting that so far at least any slowdown in global demand has not impacted the resource rich Australia. Aussie once again rose above the 9000 figure with AUDJPY gaining more that 100 points on the day.

In EZ, the EURUSD too befitted from return of risk appetite with the pair breaking above the 1.4600 level while EURJPY traded 158.40 gaining more than 400 points this week. The rise in the euro however was restrained by the lackluster GDP data which printed at 0.4% in Q4. Although the news met consensus expectations, in absolute terms it marked a 50% decline from the growth levels in Q3 and indicated that growth in 2008 is likely to slow 1.7% from 2.3% in the year past. Given this deceleration analysts have suggested that ECB could begin preparing the market for possible easing as early as Q2 of 2008 and those concerns limited the gains in the unit.

In North American session, markets will get a look at US Trade Balance in December. Traders expect a decline to -61.1B from -63.1B. If the number meets and more importantly if it beats estimates by dropping below the psychologically critical -$60B level, equities and USDJPY

...more...

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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 09:02 AM
Response to Reply #12
17. Euro= USD 1.463, GBP 0.742, CHF 1.617 and JPY 159.0 at this time

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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 08:57 AM
Response to Original message
15. Asian stocks up sharply after strong Japan growth
HONG KONG (AFP) - Asian stocks surged Thursday as surprisingly good economic figures from Japan and the US sparked hopes that share price prospects were less gloomy than feared.

Japan's economy, the world's second largest, grew at an annualised 3.7 percent pace in the three months to December, cheering investors after figures Wednesday showed US retail sales unexpectedly rose in January.

Japanese shares climbed more than four percent, sparking rallies across much of Asia. The Taiwanese and South Korean markets both closed up four percent or more, while Australia had jumped 2.6 by the end of its trading day.

"I feel much more confident today about markets than a week ago," Pierre Gave, the head of research at Hong Kong-based consultancy GaveKal, told AFP. "But I want to see a bit more prolonged stability before I call a turnaround."

Hong Kong was trading three percent higher, while India had surged more than four percent after its morning session. China was up after the opening bell and Singapore had risen nearly three percent.

Japan's expansion was more than twice as fast as predicted and came despite fears that a looming recession in the US, a key buyer of Asian goods and services, is set to slow world growth.

"Amid the recent slack economic data and fears of a recession, today's GDP (gross domestic product) data helped ease worries," said Kazuhiro Takahashi, the head of the equity department of Daiwa Securities SMBC in Japan.

But experts cautioned the outlook for Japan and the world economy was still tough after a default crisis among subprime, or riskier, US mortgages, which has ballooned into a debilitating global credit crunch.

"The negative impact of the slowdown in the US economy will be reflected in the Japanese economy from now on," said RBS Securities economist Mamoru Yamazaki, who expects slower growth rather than a recession in Japan.

Elsewhere, resource-rich Australia released positive figures showing record low unemployment of 4.1 percent. High commodity prices have helped to buoy its economy.

"Unemployment fell to the lowest since that series started in 1974," Matt Robinson, an economist at Moody's Economy.com in Sydney, told AFP. "That bodes well for the economy remaining resolute during a global economic downturn."

Investors had hoped going into 2008 that Asia, led by booming China, would be able to weather a US downturn and help prop up the world economy.

But subsequent plunges in stock prices badly dented confidence before Thursday's ray of light from Japan, which sparked rallies in most of Asia's smaller markets too, including a rise of around two percent in Indonesia.

/.. http://asia.news.yahoo.com/080214/afp/080214080932business.html
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 09:01 AM
Response to Original message
16. European shares gain after US trade data, banks down
LONDON, Feb 14 (Reuters) - European shares recovered further on Thursday after U.S. data showed a surprisingly large decline in the trade gap, while weekly jobless claims did not suggest a sharp deterioration in labour market conditions.

Banks were still the session's worst performers, with UBS (UBSN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research) shares down 5.6 percent after the Swiss bank unveiled $26.6 billion in exposure to risky U.S. mortgages and foresaw a difficult 2008.

Oil and gas shares were the top gainers in line with a bounce in the price of crude oil CLc1.

By 1340 GMT the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was up 0.7 percent at 1,344.13 points, compared with 1,338.63 just before the data, but was down from a 1.3-percent gain earlier in the day.

/.. http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idCAL1479793320080214?rpc=611
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 12:11 PM
Response to Reply #16
34.  UBS shocks investors with risky debt exposures
ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss bank UBS shocked markets with tens of billions of dollars in new exposure to risky U.S. mortgages, leveraged finance and complex securities, dramatically raising its vulnerability to the credit crisis.

The revelations, which included $26.6 billion in exposure to U.S. mortgages distinct from subprime loans, sent the bank's shares tumbling to levels not seen since 2004 as investors braced for even more writedowns.

UBS stock has lost more than half its value since last June after it took $18.1 billion of writedowns in the second half of 2007 alone on subprime-related exposures.

"They have $60-70 billion worth of exposure to troubled areas and the market did not know about much of it," said David Williams at Fox-Pitt, Kelton in London.

Deutsche Bank estimated that UBS's total exposure to risky U.S. mortgages was $68.7 billion.

"They are in a sorry predicament. They have by far the largest exposure of any European bank and they cannot just trade out of it. The crisis at UBS will last as long as the credit crisis lasts," said Williams.

Shares in UBS, which said it was facing another difficult year in 2008, were trading down 7 percent at 38 francs at 1500 GMT.

UBS also unveiled further exposures of $11.4 billion in leveraged finance -- loans made to fund buyouts of companies -- and of $11.2 billion to a complex securitization product called a U.S. reference-linked note program.

"There is no end in sight. They are giving a pretty clear steer that there are more writeoffs to come," said Simon Maughan at MF Global Securities, saying another 10 billion francs in charges were quite feasible.

UBS said on Thursday the biggest chunk of the newly unveiled exposure, announced together with full-year and fourth-quarter results, was to so-called Alt-A mortgages, which are of higher quality than subprime loans but also considered risky.

UBS's existing exposure to U.S. subprime mortgages at the end of December stood at a net $27.594 billion, making it one of the biggest casualties of the global credit crunch worldwide.

Chief Executive Marcel Rohner said he could not say if UBS would return to profit in the first quarter, after posting a fourth-quarter loss roughly in line with guidance given at the time of the bank's profit warning last month.

UBS reported a net fourth-quarter loss of 12.451 billion Swiss francs ($11.3 billion) and said it lost 4.384 billion francs for the year, in line with analysts' forecasts the profits warning.

UBS Chief Financial Officer Marco Suter also said Singapore and an unnamed Middle East investor, who both agreed in December to provide a 13 billion Swiss franc capital injection, were still committed to subscribing to a mandatory convertible note.

Rumors that Singapore was having second thoughts about the convertible issue have swirled in recent days and analysts say UBS may have to resort to a rights issue to bolster its balance sheet if more losses pile up.

"This is a committed transaction," Suter told Reuters.

Suter downplayed talk that the Swiss bank would seek to raise capital yet again, saying it could improve regulatory capital ratios without having to raise equity, by cutting risk-weighted assets or by issuing hybrid debt instruments.

Shareholders will be asked to approve the capital increase at an extraordinary shareholders' meeting on February 27.

/detail... http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080214/bs_nm/ubs_result_dc;_ylt=AqzD6K9f_znozM8L0mn4YlK573QA
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 12:13 PM
Response to Reply #16
35. European shares end flat after choppy session
LONDON, Feb 14 (Reuters) - European shares ended flat on Thursday after a choppy day in which upbeat earnings from Capgemini (CAPP.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) and Zurich Financial (ZURN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research) were offset by UBS (UBSN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research) revealing huge exposure to U.S. mortgages.

The FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares ended flat at an unofficial 1,334.52 points, having risen by as much as 1.3 percent earlier in the day.

The index fell in late trade after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the central bank would have to lower its projections for U.S. growth and warned that more subprime-related writedowns at the investment banks were likely.

/. http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idCAL1483632720080214?rpc=611
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 01:10 PM
Response to Reply #16
37. Sweden Shocks Europe With Rate Hike
LONDON (Dow Jones) -- Sweden's Riksbank proved itself the most hawkish central bank in Western Europe Wednesday, shocking economists and financial markets with an unexpected quarter of a percentage point increase in its repo rate to 4.25%.

The move sent the Swedish krona soaring and put Swedish shares under pressure.

In a statement, the Riksbank cited expectations for inflation to remain above its 2% target.

"A repo rate of around 4.25% over the coming year will contribute to bringing inflation back towards the target of 2% a couple of years ahead. It will also lead to a balanced development in production and employment," the statement said.

Hakan Frisen, head of economic research at SEB, said the move was perplexing given threats to economic growth.

"I think that it put too much weight on inflation. I think that it would have been better to have been more forward looking and stress the downside risk to growth," Frisen said.

It's safe to say virtually no one saw it coming. A Dow Jones Newswires survey of 10 economists was unanimous in calling for rates to stay on hold. A Bloomberg survey also saw all economists agree that rates weren't going anywhere Wednesday.

"So either we are all stupid or we are in a situation where the communication between the and the market has broken down completely," wrote Michael Bostrom, an economist with Danske Bank. "We tend to think it is the latter and that is very serious." <- :freak:

The Riksbank sees consumer price inflation at an average annual pace of 3.4% in 2008, falling to 2.5% in 2009 and 2.3% in 2010. Gross domestic product growth is forecast to slow from 2.5% in 2007 to 2.4% in 2008, bottoming at 2.0% in 2009 and rebounding to 2.8% in 2010.

"Economic activity in Sweden remains good and the labor market is strong," the Riksbank said in its statement. "GDP growth will slow down over the year and the increase in employment will slacken. Resource utilization in the economy will nevertheless be higher than normal."

/... http://www.smartmoney.com/bn/ON/index.cfm?story=ON-20080213-000682-0926
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UpInArms Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 10:46 AM
Response to Original message
20. OT - a post in the editorials and other articles forum
my editor/friend wanted me to post my latest editorial on DU - it printed yesterday in the paper (print only) - but she wanted it to have a wider audience.

so here 'tis

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=103x338073
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Maeve Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 10:57 AM
Response to Reply #20
21. High five, UIA!!! Way to write!
:yourock:
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UpInArms Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 11:01 AM
Response to Reply #21
22. ...
:blush:

thanks, Maeve!
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UpInArms Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 11:15 AM
Response to Original message
23. 11:13 EST Sucker Rally over so soon?
Dow 12,458.44 93.80 (0.75%)
Nasdaq 2,354.51 19.42 (0.82%)
S&P 500 1,358.09 9.12 (0.67%)
10-Yr Bond 3.782% 0.088


NYSE Volume 1,080,566,750
Nasdaq Volume 744,035,375

11:00 am : The stock market falls near its worst level, although losses remain modest.

According to the National Association of Realtors, fourth quarter median home prices fell 5.8% compared to last year. The West was hit the hardest with a 8.7% slide, while the Midwest performed the best with a 3.2% loss. The median home price in Lansing, MI fell most, a 18.8% decline.

Bernanke and Paulson are currently answering questions, and have completed their prepared speeches.DJ30 -60.72 NASDAQ -11.78 SP500 -5.12 NASDAQ Dec/Adv/Vol 1475/1120/597 mln NYSE Dec/Adv/Vol 1842/1047/300 mln

10:30 am : The major indices regain some ground as they trade with a slight loss. Energy is managing to buck the negative trend this session. A $1.18 gain in crude oil prices to $94.38 is giving the sector support.

Fed Chairman Bernanke has not given the market any revelations in his prepared comments, and as a result the market has had a muted response thus far. He continues to emphasize downside risks, indicating the Fed is likely to continue to ease rates. Of note, he said weakening of bond insurers are forcing banks to take markdowns, which is adding to market strains, according to Reuters.

Treasury Secretary Paulson is currently speaking.
DJ30 -18.66 NASDAQ -0.13 SP500 -2.84 NASDAQ Dec/Adv/Vol 1463/1021/415 mln NYSE Dec/Adv/Vol 1792/1022/192 mln

10:00 am : The major indices are off their lows, but remain in the red. Fed Chairman Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Paulson are set to testify before the Senate Banking Committee as this comment gets posted.

The two most influential sectors, financials and tech, are laggards this morning. The market will have a hard time making a significant advance without the support of at least one of these heavily-weighted sectors.

Bellwether Intel (INTC 20.60, -0.61) is playing a large role in the tech sector's weakness. Earlier today, Goldman Sachs took Intel off its Conviction Buy list, according to CNBC. DJ30 -37.55 NASDAQ -4.67 SP500 -2.29 NASDAQ Dec/Adv/Vol 1344/926/177 mln

09:45 am : Stocks open on a flat note and then fall into the red. Losses remain modest, with the Nasdaq underperforming after providing leadership yesterday.

On the economic front, Jobless claims for the week ended Feb. 9 fell to 348K from the previous reading of 357K. The number was basically in-line with expectations, but should be seen as a good sign as it is below levels that typically precede a recession. Separately, the December trade deficit fell to $58.8 billion from $63.1 billion. This suggests an upward revision to the net exports component of GDP.DJ30 -27.47 NASDAQ -10.88 SP500 -2.12

09:15 am : S&P futures vs fair value: +0.9. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: +1.5.

09:01 am : S&P futures vs fair value: +0.1. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: +1.0. S&P futures gain a few points and now suggest a flat open. Comcast (CMCSA) is helping to keep sellers at bay after topping its earnings expectations and issuing a dividend.

08:33 am : S&P futures vs fair value: -1.8. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: +1.3. Stock futures have a muted reaction to some generally in-line economic data. Jobless claims for the week ended Feb. 9 fell to 349K. Economists expected a reading of 350K. The December trade balance was close to expected at -58.8 billion compared to the estimate of -62.0 billion

08:00 am : S&P futures vs fair value: -3.0. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: -2.0. It’s shaping up to be a flat start for the stock market. The key event of the day will be testimony before the Senate Banking Commitee by Fed Chairman Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Paulson and SEC Chairman Cox. The weekly initial jobless claims are set for release at 8:30.
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burf Donating Member (745 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 12:04 PM
Response to Reply #23
31. I caught Paulson
speaking a few minutes back. He sounded anything but confident. All the stammering and stuttering kinda reminded me of Chimpy. Perhaps they have just been spending too much time together lately.
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 11:35 AM
Response to Original message
26. Bond Insurer Shockwaves Expand
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2008/02/bond-insurer-shockwaves-expand.html

One of the big news items yesterday was the turmoil in the auction-rate securities market, a $330 billion corner of the muni market, which is a direct casualty of the distress with the bond insurers. The specter of Bristol Myers taking a $275 million charge on an $811 million, announced at the end of January, has badly spooked investors, particularly other corporate buyers. The Wall Street Journal, in a rather odd first page story, reduces the dangers of the auction-rate securities market to the woes of the Mahers, two brothers who, having made over $1 billion selling their shipping business, then shortly lost $286 million after one of their money managers, Lehman Brothers, put two-thirds of the money allotted to them in ARS. (Felix Salmon argues that the money isn't lost if the market comes back, but Lehman clearly had the option of buying back the Mahers' position before things got really ugly, and their failure to do so is a vote of no confidence).

So none of them wants to be stuck with the hot potato of muni paper that is downgraded because its guarantee has been marked down a notch or two. S&P and Moody's have been regularly saber-rattling that they will downgrade MBIA and Ambac post haste if they don't make considerable progress on improving their balance sheets, so worries are acute.

Not surprisingly, the buyers have dried up, and the dealers, who might at other times step into the breech, are sufficiently impaired that they want none of it. So there was considerable hand-wringing about the damage this was causing poor hapless government bodies. From the Financial Times:


Bond insurers guaranteeing much of this debt could face rating downgrades – is the latest incarnation of the credit crisis.....

“The auction securities market is falling apart,” said David Cooke, chief financial officer at Park Nicollet Heath Services in Minneapolis.

Municipal borrowers are scrambling to seek letters of credit from banks and other fresh sources of finance....

“Dealers who would normally pick up a slump are not doing so as their balance sheets are full,” said Jon Schotz, chief investment officer with Saybrook Capital.

The importance of bond insurers to municipal borrowers has prompted regulators to push banks to provide capital or credit lines so that Ambac, MBIA and others can retain their triple-A ratings.

It is difficult to say what impact this is having on the rescue efforts being orchestrated by Eric Dinallo, New York superintendent of insurance, except obviously putting more pressure on him. Unlike the failed SIV rescue operation, this initiative has had remarkably few leaks.

However, the muni panic (and Buffett's offer) appear to have shifted focus (at least in the public mind) 180 degrees away from the initial target. Recall that the objective was to somehow get more capital into the insurers somehow because downgrades would End the Financial World as We Know It. Why? Remember, the monolines were deep into credit enhancement of structured credits, particularly CDOs, but also commercial and residential real estate deals. The Wall Street firms are still sitting on inventory. Many investors also hold this paper, but if it were downgraded, a fair number would be forced to sell, because regulations and/or investment guidelines restrict them to certain levels of holdings of specified ratings. Forced sales at a time when no one is remotely interested in buying this sort of paper would lead to distressed prices, requiring banks and investment banks, all subject to mark-to-market accounting, to take further writedowns against their already weakened capital bases.

Before, the muni exposures were considered to be a non-problem. (Accrued Interest reminded us that even though in theory muni bond insurance is a scam, in practice it is valuable to municipalities for whom getting a rating is more costly than buying credit enhancement, and to muni buyers who are often very dependent on ratings in their purchase process).

Now they have emerged as a huge issue, and one that vastly complicates the already difficult task of trying to keep the monoline garbage barge afloat.

And in case you think the risk to Wall Street is exaggerated, consider this bit of uplifting news from the Financial Times. The bond insurers insisted the credit default swaps they wrote were so stellar that they did not need to post collateral, unlike most other counterparties.

The resulting problem is two-fold. First, Wall Street firms entered into what were called negative basis trades in which (in grossly simplified terms) the use of a monoline CDS enabled them to accelerate all the profit over the life of a trade into the current accounting period. A failure of the insurance means the profit will have to be reversed. Second and worse, many players hedged their CDS positions with other CDS. Thus, a failure of a counterparty means supposedly hedged positions are unhedged or only partially hedged, which can lead to losses, unwinding of CDS, and further counterparty failures.

The CDS market is over $45 trillion in face value of outstandings, Problems in even a small percentage of swaps would have serious consequences.

From the Financial Times:

Goldman Sachs has made plenty of canny decisions in relation to the credit crunch. One of the smartest might have been its treatment of MBIA, the world’s biggest bond insurer.

While many rivals have in recent years been cheerfully using bond insurers to hedge their structured credit bets, Goldmans has refused to do so due to concern about counterparty risk.

MBIA did not post collateral, arguing, like other bond insurers, that its creditworthiness was rock solid, as reflected by its AAA credit ratings.

Now Goldman’s stance is paying dividends as MBIA and others such as Ambac and FGIC struggle to maintain their credit ratings and banks with exposure contemplate another round of multi-billion-dollar writedowns.

In taking $2bn and $3.1bn writedowns in hedges with insurers whose ability to honour those commitments is in doubt, CIBC and Merrill Lynch respectively have become the face of Wall Street’s nightmares.

Both thought complicated debt investments they held both on their balance sheet and off were hedged with the value of those investments guaranteed by monoline insurers including MBIA, Ambac, ACA Capital and a handful of others.

That is, until the providers of the guarantees began facing downgrades from the rating agencies, throwing their ability to stand by their commitments into question.

“It’s just a shell game,” says the head of credit risk for one investment bank in London. “Many firms worry about the risk that a security will drop in value, so they get someone to guarantee it.

“But they have just substituted one kind of risk – counterparty risk – for another. They are just passing around the risk, not eliminating it.”

In doing so, many banks and brokerages seemed to have overlooked what now seems obvious.

If the environment is so bad that the investments will plummet in value, the likelihood is that those who guarantee the value of the investments will find themselves under pressure and may not be able to make good their promises.

And the existence of rock solid hedge counterparties has allowed banks to book profits on trades that take advantage of price differentials for credit in the bond and derivatives markets.

The upfront gains on “negative basis trades” may evaporate if they are no longer hedged. A downgrade from AAA on bond insurers used for the hedges would do just that.

It is a Catch-22: if you really need the guarantee, you cannot assume it will be there.

That sort of correlation seems to have been a lesson that nobody learns from one crisis to the next.

Ten years ago, when the market for credit insurance was young, participants who had big exposure to Indonesian companies bought insurance from Indonesian banks.

But when the currency sank during the Asian financial crisis, many institutions were no longer able to honour their dollar debts – not only the corporate borrowers but the Indonesian banks selling the protection, rendering their guarantees meaningless...

Of Merrill’s $3.1bn writedown on hedges from the financial guarantors, $2.6bn was related to “writedowns of the firm’s current exposure to a non-investment grade counterparty” on the (at least nominally) safest slices of debt backed largely by mortgages, according to Merrill’s financial statements. (That “non-investment grade counterparty” is ACA.)

The firm also wrote down its exposure to other guarantors by a smaller amount.

Still, at the end of December Merrill had $24bn in insurance against a drop in value of such debt, known as the super senior tranches of asset backed collateralised debt obligations, which it had bought from “various third parties including monoline financial guarantors, insurers and other market participants”, most likely hedge funds.

Merrill was hardly alone in placing its faith in the ability of the guarantors to stand by their pledge to support the value of these complicated slices of mortgage and other kinds of debt.

There is another reason why worse may be to come. It is that the guarantors also stood on the other side of Wall Street as a major counterparty in providing insurance in the oddly named credit default swap market, where parties buy and sell insurance against defaults.

That role is now spooking Wall Street.

“As a market with huge notional volumes, a large number of counterparties, rising default risk and financial counterparties among the most affected by the current market turmoil, concern is by no means surprising,” Morgan Stanley analysts said in a recent report.

The report notes that generally both sides to a credit default swap post collateral, and as the value of the trade moves against one side, that side has to post more collateral, a feature meant to reassure participants since the market is an over-the-counter one with no exchange in the middle.

But in the past, these guarantors refused to post collateral, arguing that their credit quality was so rock-solid.

Now that their credit looks more like crumbling sandstone, fears of the creditworthiness of these guarantors as counterparties has become a legitimate source of alarm.

Despite the grim news, there was a bit of comic relief. MBIA has gotten positively screechy, trying to blame its woes on evil Bill Ackman of Pershing Square and other less visible shorts. This posture conveniently ignores that rating agency Egan Jones and several Wall Street analysts have posted even more dire loss forecasts than Ackman. Moreover, Ackman has made his latest model and assumptions completely transparent and has invited comment.

This move was met with derision. From Herb Greenberg at the Wall Street Journal's MarketBeat, "MBIA vs. Shorts: They’re Kidding, Right?":

I had to do a double-take when I saw a Reuters story earlier today that said MBIA planned to urge lawmakers at a Congressional committee hearing Thursday to curtail “the unscrupulous and dangerous market manipulation of short-sellers.”

Memo to MBIA: Take a number and get in line. The bond insurer is the latest in a long list of companies that, over the years, have pleaded with the government to do something — anything — about those dastardly short-sellers who have dared raise red flags over their precious companies.

That’s right: They should tar-and-feather the likes of Bill Ackman of Pershing Square Capital, the most vocal bear on MBIA, who had the audacity to very publicly write a 60-page paper in December 2002 headlined, “Is MBIA Triple A?”. They should further tar-and-feather the guy, and those like him, for taking the other side of the bullish bet on company’s like MBIA — and telling the world they’re doing so — because of their conviction and willingness to warn others about what they believe is looming trouble. (Funny, nobody ever complains about “dangerous market manipulation of longs,” but I digress…) And they should tar-and feather the guy for being right and pretty much forecasting what has happened.

It was, after all, in that paper five years ago that Ackman started warning about the very kind of collateralized debt obligations that have landed MBIA in hot water and, as Ackman suggested at the time, put its Triple-A rating at risk ...

At the same time Ackman also was first to point out that MBIA had engaged in a questionable transaction that, in effect, involved insuring a loss after the loss and then collecting on the insurance. (I wrote about it several times; nobody gave a hoot.) The issue, which strikes to the heart of the company’s culture, prompted an investigation by regulators; MBIA settled the civil securities fraud charges last year by paying $75 million.

So, here we are, five years after Ackman first surfaced on MBIA. The ratings agencies have downgraded thousands of CDOs. Thousand of others have been put on credit watch. MBIA had had to pay that fine for engaging in questionable practices. And its stock has been crushed.

Now, rather than accept the reality that it caused its own problems with bad business and actuarial decisions, MBIA is complaining to Congress about the guy who blew the whistle.

Michael Shedlock also took a very dim view:

For starters anyone blaming shorts is in trouble. It is an act of desperation that has a 100% failure rate for as long as I can remember. Any company baling shorts deserves to have shareholders walk away. It is an implicit admission of failure. Companies that execute well, welcome shorts. The shorts provide fuel for driving the market higher.

What's galling is the request for taxpayer money for the sole purpose of bailing out the company doing the asking. This is not about "far reaching effects on the U.S. and global economies" this is a request for a government handout.


Note MBIA is also trying to blame the rating agencies, which is positively deranged given the free pass they have gotten for so many years.
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 11:40 AM
Response to Original message
27. Bankers: The New Socialists (Real Estate Bailout Edition)
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2008/02/bankers-new-socialists-real-estate.html


We've often observed that the reason to keep the banking industry (and Wall Street, now that some firms are too big to fail) on a short leash is that it plays with the public's money: gains go to employees and shareholders but losses are socialized.

We now see a bald-faced example of that problem in the latest machinations in Washington, as reported in the Wall Street Journal, "Worried Bankers Seek to Shift Risk to Uncle Sam." There are plans afoot to dump subprime risk on our collective shoulders, courtesy various proposals to guarantee subprime refinanciings.

In fairness, as outlined in the Journal, one scheme involves getting the government on the hook, via expanding the mandate of the FHA to include refinancing delinquent borrowers. Note that this turns the previous operation of the FHA on its head. The big reason that the FHA lost market share to subprime lenders was that its lending standards were conservative and required borrowers to undergo screening (horrors!). The second one. of letting servicers write down mortgage balances in line with current market value of the home is oddly similar to the bankruptcy law changes that heretofore the industry has fought tooth and nail (those revisions would have given judges the same power over residential mortgages that they have over commercial: to reduce the secured borrowing to the level of the security, i.e., the value of the real estate, and also modify payment terms).

Note that the article focused on the first plan, as will this post. The second one is not bad in concept (remember, no solution is good here; we are talking about less bad among lousy choices), except it leaves the investors as the sole bagholders for lapses that operated all along the securitization chain (it was far more equitable when banks owned the loans they booked, but then again, they could and did make mods without a lot of drama).

No one seems to be learning the lesson playing out before our very eyes from the bond insurers: guarantees can become very costly when entered into casually. The promises of various government sponsored enterprises, such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, live in a dubious never-never land, where they are nominally private enterprises but everyone expects that if things got ugly and their mortgage guarantees were to look questionable, the GSEs would be supported by the Federal government.

James Hamilton, at the Fed's Jackson Hole conference, pointed out that Freddie and Fannie were undercapitalized and overextended; this was before their ceilings were raised to include jumbo mortgages. Now we are gong to add even worse credits to the burgeoning pile of government guaranteed paper. ...What is particularly disturbing about this latest salvage operation is that it involves no penalty to the firms that created this mess. Of course, that's one of the beauties of the originate and distribute model: there are so many parties in the food chain that it is hard to parse out culpability.

But consider one successful model of dealing with a financial crisis, one classified Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff designated as one of the "big five" deep and nasty post WWII financial crises, that of Norway. Barry Ritholtz summarized the program:


• Private solutions were explored before the government intervened.
• Share capital was written down to zero before committing public funds.
• The government acted swiftly to limit contagion, but did not provide a blanket guarantee.
• Liquidity support was given to illiquid, but solvent institutions.
• The government did not use an asset management company.

Notice two critical elements lacking in any of the current thinking: taking out public shareholders completely before providing government support and providing only narrow support. The perps take the pain and do not have the opportunity to enjoy any upside from public rescue efforts. And no broad scale guarnatees were made. The FHA proposal on the table, while it may not be mplemented, comes close to that sort of action.

Consider: if the parties coming hat in hand to DC for a rescue had to write down all their equity to get help (or even merely all the equity in the directly related operations) I suspect you'd see an outburst of creativity. As Samuel Johnson once said, the prospect of being hanged at dawn wonderfully focuses the mind.

MORE AT LINK
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burf Donating Member (745 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 12:06 PM
Response to Reply #27
33. How does the new paradigm go?
Privatize the profits.
Socialize the losses.

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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 11:43 AM
Response to Original message
28. WSJ recommends letting the poor freeze to death to combat global warming

http://www.rfkactionfront.com/2008/02/wsj-recommends-letting-poor-freeze-to.html

Last Wednesday, the Senate voted on several amendments to the proposed economic stimulus bill. Democrats wanted to add an extension of unemployment benefits and home heating subsidies for poor families. The Wall Street Journal editorial board didn't think that was such a good idea. They wrote:



As for home heating subsidies, these encourage greater energy use, especially in the Northeast, which depends on oil more than natural gas. This is thus more of a stimulus to foreign oil exporters than to the U.S. economy. Think of it as one more subsidy to add carbon to the atmosphere, notwithstanding the usual global warming grandstanding.


The Wall Street Journal editorial board is a leading global warming denier and has consistently opposed the Kyoto Protocol and any other efforts to mitigate this potentially apocalyptic problem. But with their editorial on February 8th, it seems they've found a plan to combat global warming that they actually like -- namely, letting the poor freeze to death. So, according to the WSJ -- investing in green energy technologies = bad, regulating power plants = bad, allowing the poor to freeze to death (especially those freaks in the Northeast who heat their homes during the winter) = good for the environment and a plan they can really get behind.


Original WSJ Editorial link: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120243245312152389.html
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 11:49 AM
Response to Original message
29. Hackonomics
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/02/dishonest-econo.html

"The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists."

-Joan Robinson, Cambridge University

>

One of the things that really perturbs me are disingenuous, intellectually indefensible commentary consisting of willfully misleading tripe. Up until recently, that territory has been owned by the WSJ OPED pages. This past weekend, the NYT was seen elbowing its way into the same space.

I call this approach to economic analysis Hackonomics.

An OpEd in the Sunday Times is classic Hackonomics. Unfortunately, it takes little craft to slip junk past the editors at the Times OpEd section. Impressive-looking academic or government credentials seems to be all that is required. (Its a shame they don't have, say, a professor from the Princeton Economics department on staff).

Perhaps there is a fear of looking silly or economically ignorant, rather than asking anyone else about any of these "analyses." What we get instead are pieces like You Are What You Spend. The authors are Michael Cox, and Richard Alm, chief economist and senior economics writer at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. As my British colleagues would delightfully articulate, "their work is shite."


To wit: These two gentlemen press forward the idea that the proper manner to review economic inequality should involve looking not at income differentials. Rather, this Fed duo favors a more direct measure of economic status: household consumption. They claim "the gap between rich and poor is far less than most assume, and that the abstract, income-based way in which we measure the so-called poverty rate no longer applies to our society."

Their analysis is so problematic and their theory so full of holes, that, if time permitted, we could identify errors in nearly every paragraph. That sort of critique is best reserved for serious intellectual analysis of major importance. For Hackonomics, we will simply identify 3 major flaws, and then get on to more pressing and important work.

Let's take a closer look at their arguments:

1. Income Disparity: Abstract? There is nothing "abstract" about income-based measures of poverty or wealth inequality. Merely calling income comparisons "abstract" does not make it so, nor does it make their position any less absurd. Instead, it reads as a transparent attempt by the authors to avoid any income discussion.

Why not discuss income? Perhaps the data is the reason: The share of national income of the wealthiest 1% rose from 14.6% five years ago (2003) to 17.4% in 2005 (Emmanuel Saez, University of California-Berkeley). And since 2005, the wealth disparity has grown even further.

Indeed, as several commentators have already pointed out, these same authors previously tried to make an income based argument that "the gap between rich and poor is far less than most assume" -- and crashed and burned.

Next attempt, please.

2. Median/Average. The next intellectually corrupt trick is a classic statistical error. The authors look at average -- rather than median -- spending and income by quintile, and determine there isn't much inequality in the United States.

How did Sunday's silliness manage such a feat? They start with a variation of the median/average trick (Bill Gates walks into a bar . . . ). Only this time, the perps are slightly clever. Rather than merely play with "average," they oh so craftily break the spending pools into quintiles. This creates the appearance (see chart below) of relative equality on a per capita basis of spending equality.

Any statistician in the country will tell you this an embarrassing error of the highest magnitude.


The top quintile have an "average" income of ~$150k and an average spending of ~$70k. But "average" broadly misrepresents the top quintile. This twist ignores the vastly disproportionate income and spending habits of the top 1%, and the even more disproportionate top 0.1%.

Wall Street Journal columnist Robert Frank's book, Richistan looks at the recent unprecedented rise of wealth in the U.S. The top 2 1/2% -- over 7 million households -- have a net worth of $1–$10 million. The top 1/2% -- over 1.4 million households -- have a $10–$100 million net worth. There are now thousands of households -- top 0.1% -- with a $100 million to $1 billion in assets. Oh, and there are now more than 400 billionaires -- the top 0.01%.


This is not a bad thing per se. I am all in favor of economic freedom and wealth creation. But to pretend that there is little wealth disparity is simply nonsense.

~~~

3. Comparing Household Consumption:

Looking at Household consumption can yield some interesting insights -- but it matters at what you look at. Our intrepid authors have avoided discussing the expenditures on necessities, and instead went a different way:

"To understand why consumption is a better guideline of economic prosperity than income, it helps to consider how our lives have changed. Nearly all American families now have refrigerators, stoves, color TVs, telephones and radios. Air-conditioners, cars, VCRs or DVD players, microwave ovens, washing machines, clothes dryers and cellphones have reached more than 80 percent of households.

As the second chart, on the spread of consumption, shows, this wasn’t always so. The conveniences we take for granted today usually began as niche products only a few wealthy families could afford. In time, ownership spread through the levels of income distribution as rising wages and falling prices made them affordable in the currency that matters most — the amount of time one had to put in at work to gain the necessary purchasing power.

At the average wage, a VCR fell from 365 hours in 1972 to a mere two hours today. A cellphone dropped from 456 hours in 1984 to four hours. A personal computer, jazzed up with thousands of times the computing power of the 1984 I.B.M., declined from 435 hours to 25 hours. Even cars are taking a smaller toll on our bank accounts: in the past decade, the work-time price of a mid-size Ford sedan declined by 6 percent."

This is, of course, sanctimoniuos bullshit classic economic misdirection.

What the authors are revealing here are not rising incomes or societal similarities of wealth. Rather, their data and cost discussion are about Technology adoption lifecycle (Joe M. Bohlen and George M. Beal, 1957), later refined in Everett M. Rogers' Diffusion of Innovations. New technologies and products come down in price over time, regardless of the state of economic equality in the broader society.

This is the oldest dodge in economics. That two Fed economists either fail to understand technology adoption cycles -- or worse, have chosen to willfully ignore it -- simply boggles the mind. If this is the best that Federal reserve researchers can produce, it does go a long way in explaining why our financial system is near crisis.


A quick review of this concept is in order, on the (hopefully) slim chance the rest of the Fed Reserve research group is as abysmally educated in the ways of technology and economics.

All of the above named products -- Washing machines, phones, autos, TVs, VCRs, Cellphones, PCs -- went through a well established adoption model. In the classic definition (see chart below), the first group of people to use any new technology are called "innovators," followed by "early adopters," then the "early majority" and "late majority," and lastly, the "laggards."
>

Technology Adoption Lifecycle




>
The impact of this adoption process and the manufacturing economies of scale are significant determinant of technology product prices.

Here is a grossly over-simplified discussion of how this works: When the innovators buy a product, they essentially are paying for all of the R&D costs, and other development expenses. You paid 365 labor units for a VCR in 1972 because they were a limited production, custom product that was practically hand made. When a PC cost 465 labor units, chip fabs were nowhere near as plentiful as today -- and the biggest cost in early PCs were the exorbitant chipsets contained in them.

The early adopters pay less than the innovators, as factories get built to mass produce chips or tape transport mechanisms or cell phone keypads. What was a nearly custom made product becomes a merely limited-production, high-end one. Where the innovators paid for the R&D, the early adopters paid for the fabs and factories to be built.


The early majority doesn't get the use of the product for the first few years, but they get a big price benefit of manufacturing economies of scale. Mass production of components bring prices down; successful products attract competition to the space, and soon more manufacturers are cranking out more units. Through competition, prices begin dropping faster and faster. The late majority gets even cheaper prices. Consider the laggards and the VCR today -- they cost about $29 each.

None of this has any relevancy to problems of wealth distribution and inequality in America.

To understand the serious issue of relative inequality, you would not look at technological toys (unless you were idiots). Rather, you would consider the consumption of necessities -- Shelter, food, medical care, clothing, education, transportation. Not only that, but you would not simply review the quantity, but also the quality of the products that get consumed.

Compare the top and bottom quintiles: Who is consuming fatty, high carb foods, and who is eating lots of protein, fresh fruits and vegetables? What about medical care? Do they have reliable access to any sort of family physician, regular check ups, doctor visits, ongoing treatments, preventative care -- or is their medical consumption on an emergency room basis? What is the quality of their housing like -- safe neighborhoods, with access to good schools? Or something less desirable?


If we are going to use consumption as a measure of economic equality, then look at the quality of essentials; measuring toys ain't the way to go . . .

~~~

4. How do the Affluent Elite Spend?

Since the authors want to look at spending, let's do just that. Only instead of their intellectual indefensible "average" let's see how that top 0.5% spent their cash.

CHARTS, GRAPHS TABLES AND MORE AT LINK
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 12:04 PM
Response to Original message
30. Bernanke: Fed to act as needed to support growth
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress on Thursday the central bank will act as needed to help the struggling U.S. economy, but it has to be mindful that growth should pick up later in the year.

The Fed "will be carefully evaluating incoming information bearing on the economic outlook and will act in a timely manner as needed to support growth and to provide adequate insurance against downside risks," Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee.

He said the outlook for the economy had worsened in recent months and risks to growth had picked up.

However, the central bank chairman also said he expects sluggish growth to give way to a somewhat stronger expansion later this year and the likely effects of fiscal and monetary stimulus now put in place had to be considered in determining the appropriate level of interest rates.

"Our policy stance must be determined in light of the medium-term forecast for real activity and inflation, as well as the risks to that forecast," he said.

Bernanke painted a somber picture of risks facing the economy and financial markets saw his comments as keeping the door open to more interest rate cuts from the Fed, which has already lowered benchmark borrowing costs by 2.25 percentage points since mid-September. The federal funds rate now stands at 3 percent.

U.S. short-term interest rate futures prices pared losses to imply a 20 percent chance the central bank will drop rates by three-quarters of a percentage point in March, up from 6 percent earlier. A half-point cut is fully expected.

"Policy-makers are clearly ready to provide further monetary easing to support growth," said Steve Malyon, a currency strategist for Scotia Capital in Toronto.

Stock prices stayed moderately lower and government bond prices were steady at lower levels, but the dollar dipped against the euro and the yen.

WEIGHT ON CONSUMER SPENDING

Bernanke predicted a further drop in home building and related activities was likely, and said a softer jobs market, higher energy prices and falling home values could be expected to weigh on consumer spending in the near term.

At the same time, he noted that inflation had moved up as a result of soaring prices for oil and food and the weaker dollar, adding that inflation risks bear close watching.

/... http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080214/bs_nm/usa_economy_bernanke_dc
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 12:05 PM
Response to Reply #30
32.  Market hits session lows on Bernanke remarks
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks fell on Thursday, with the Nasdaq down 1 percent, after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said economic growth would be sluggish at best in the near term and negative broker action on Intel Corp sparked a sell-off in technology companies.

All three indexes were at session lows.

The Dow Jones industrial average was down 114.29 points, or 0.91 percent, at 12,437.95. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 11.18 points, or 0.82 percent, at 1,356.03. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 25.50 points, or 1.07 percent, at 2,348.43.

/. http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080214/bs_nm/markets_stocks_dc;_ylt=Al484NhGb89piymDqHliqyq573QA
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TrogL Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 12:20 PM
Response to Original message
36. Loonie Watch
Edited on Thu Feb-14-08 12:21 PM by TrogL
Highlights

Current:



30-day and 90-day vs.greenback:



30-day vs. Euro, Yen, UK Pound and Swiss Franc




Currency Comparison: http://members.shaw.ca/trogl/looniewatch.html

Detailed analysis: http://quotes.ino.com/exchanges/?r=CME_CD

Up-to-the-minute graph: http://quotes.ino.com/chart/?s=CME_CD.Y%24%24&v=s&w=5&t=l&a=1

Historical values http://www.x-rates.com/d/USD/CAD/data30.html

2008-01-03 Thursday, January 3 1.00959 USD
2008-01-04 Friday, January 4 1.0012 USD
2008-01-07 Monday, January 7 0.995025 USD
2008-01-08 Tuesday, January 8 1.0015 USD
2008-01-09 Wednesday, January 9 0.991768 USD
2008-01-10 Thursday, January 10 0.986291 USD
2008-01-11 Friday, January 11 0.980584 USD
2008-01-14 Monday, January 14 0.979432 USD
2008-01-15 Tuesday, January 15 0.983574 USD
2008-01-16 Wednesday, January 16 0.976753 USD
2008-01-17 Thursday, January 17 0.971817 USD
2008-01-18 Friday, January 18 0.97144 USD
2008-01-21 Monday, January 21 0.97144 USD
2008-01-22 Tuesday, January 22 0.9758 USD
2008-01-23 Wednesday, January 23 0.972573 USD
2008-01-24 Thursday, January 24 0.99295 USD
2008-01-25 Friday, January 25 0.995619 USD
2008-01-28 Monday, January 28 0.995818 USD
2008-01-29 Tuesday, January 29 1.0022 USD
2008-01-30 Wednesday, January 30 1.00644 USD
2008-01-31 Thursday, January 31 0.998203 USD
2008-02-01 Friday, February 1 1.00614 USD
2008-02-04 Monday, February 4 1.00735 USD
2008-02-05 Tuesday, February 5 0.995718 USD
2008-02-06 Wednesday, February 6 0.997705 USD
2008-02-07 Thursday, February 7 0.988631 USD
2008-02-08 Friday, February 8 1.0006 USD
2008-02-11 Monday, February 11 0.998203 USD
2008-02-12 Tuesday, February 12 1.00371 USD
2008-02-13 Wednesday, February 13 1.0008 USD


Current values

http://quotes.ino.com/exchanges/?r=CME_CD)


Market Open High Low Last Change Pct

CD.Y$$ Cash 1.0037 1.0058 1.0000 1.0033 +0.0009 +0.09%
CD.H08 Mar 2008 1.0042 1.0055 0.9977 1.0030 +0.0013 +0.13%
CD.M08 Jun 2008 1.0010 1.0010 0.9960 0.9996 +0.0034 +0.34%
CD.U08 Sep 2008 0.9785 0.9785 0.9780 0.9977 +0.0034 +0.34%
CD.Z08 Dec 2008 0.9750 0.9750 0.9750 0.9957 +0.0033 +0.33%
CD.H09 Mar 2009 0.9810 0.9825 0.9937 +0.0032 +0.32%
CD.M09 Jun 2009 0.9995 0.9995 0.9917 +0.0031 +0.31%


Other combinations: (http://quotes.ino.com/exchanges/?c=currencies)


Market Open High Low Last Change Pct

AUSTRALIAN $/CANADIAN $ (NYBOT:AS)
AS.H08 Mar 2008 0.8834 0.8901 -0.0115 -1.33%
AUSTRALIAN $/US$ (NYBOT:AU)
AU.H08 Mar 2008 0.9042 0.8914 -0.0089 -1.02%
CANADIAN $/JAPANESE YEN (NYBOT:HY)
HY.H08 Mar 2008 107.000 107.000 107.000 108.120 +1.195 +1.07%
EURO/AUSTRALIAN $ (NYBOT:RA)
RA.H08 Mar 2008 1.6115 1.6115 1.6115 1.6335 +0.0147 +0.88%
EURO/BRITISH POUND (NYBOT:GB)
GB.H08 Mar 2008 0.7424 0.7434 0.7417 0.7419 -0.0013 -0.18%
EURO/CANADIAN $ (NYBOT:EP)
EP.H08 Mar 2008 1.4870 1.4870 1.4870 1.4540 -0.0058 -0.40%
EURO/JAPANESE YEN (NYBOT:EJ)
EJ.H08 Mar 2008 157.75 157.82 157.71 157.91 +0.76 +0.47%
EURO/US$ (SMALL) (NYBOT:EO)
EO.H08 Mar 2008 1.4475 1.4477 1.4475 1.4561 -0.0015 -0.10%


Blather (from http://quotes.ino.com/exchanges/?r=CME_CD)

The March Canadian Dollar was steady to slightly lower overnight but remains above the 10-day moving average crossing at 99.83. Stochastics and the RSI are neutral signaling that sideways trading is possible near-term. If March renews the rally off January's low, the reaction high crossing at 101.67 is the next upside target. Closes below the 20-day moving average crossing at 99.27 would confirm that a short-term top has been posted. First resistance is last Friday's high crossing at 100.44. Second resistance is the reaction high crossing at 101.20. First support is the 10-day moving average crossing at 99.83. Second support is the 20-day moving average crossing at 96.27.

Analysis

Another day, another yo-yo loonie. :crazy:

On the Alberta Provincial election campaign trail, the left is yelling about environmental concerns and housing. Not much else happening.
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 01:19 PM
Response to Original message
39. Putin boasts of Russian economy
Russia will have no problem weathering the current global financial troubles, President Vladimir Putin said Thursday, boasting of Russia's economic transformation in his eight years in power.

At his annual marathon news conference, Putin barked out a series of figures to illustrate the country's economic progress and then laid out an array of problems for his successor to address.

When Putin took Russia's helm on New Year's Eve 1999, the country was tens of billions of dollars in debt, afflicted by widespread poverty and using a currency that had collapsed the previous year. Now it runs a huge budget surplus and its economy is so strong that Putin predicted it would not be affected by the current international financial troubles.

"It will be quite easy for Russian banks to get through the liquidity crisis," he told the gathering of hundreds of reporters at a Kremlin auditorium.

"We have restored the fundamental principles of Russian economy on an absolutely new market base, and we are surely changing into one of the economic leaders" of the world, Putin said.

Putin's tone was bluff, even truculent, apparently reflecting both his pride in Russia's accomplishments and Russia's belief that its achievements are given short shrift by other countries.

"In 2000, we calculated that more than 30 percent of the population was below the poverty line ...(now) that's less than 14 percent," Putin said.

"The stock index rose 20 percent" in 2007, he said. "Twenty percent -- that's not bad as an indicator."

Russia's overall economy is now the world's seventh-largest, he said.

/... http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8UQ7KEG0.htm
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CatholicEdHead Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 02:16 PM
Response to Reply #39
42. Is the current Russian economy just a decade or two ahead of ours?
We do seem to be in a very similar area like the USSR was in the early 90's.

Of course minus the remaining oil reserves.
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Ghost Dog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 01:54 PM
Response to Original message
41. Chile stocks zig-zag lower on Fed comments; peso up
SANTIAGO, Feb 14 (Reuters) - Chilean stock indexes fell in afternoon trade on Thursday, giving up earlier gains, after the U.S. Federal Reserve said the economic outlook worsened in recent months. The peso rose versus the dollar.

Chile's all-market IGPA index .IGPA declined 0.37 percent to 13,231 points, while the blue-chip IPSA index .IPSA fell 0.50 percent to 2,859 points.

Chile's five-day rally came to an end after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said the central bank would act as needed to help the struggling U.S. economy and that downside risks to growth had increased.

"He delivered a more negative outlook. It's as if he confirmed the U.S. recession," said Paulina Barahona, an analyst with the Tanner brokerage.

/... http://uk.reuters.com/article/marketsNewsUS/idUKN1434514520080214?rpc=401&
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Hugin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 04:01 PM
Response to Original message
43. ~15:55 ET: Heck of a job...
Index Last Change % change
• DJIA 12368.12 -184.12 -1.47%
• NASDAQ 2332.79 -41.14 -1.73%
• S&P 500 1348.13 -19.08 -1.40%


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4dsc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:10 PM
Response to Original message
44. Cramer want's LOWER interest rates yesterday
Cramer is on the TV explaining why he believes the FED should cut rates even lower to save Wall Street and Main street.. What an ass..
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UpInArms Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 06:12 PM
Response to Original message
45. today's color: red
Dow 12,376.98 175.26 (1.40%)
Nasdaq 2,332.54 41.39 (1.74%)
S&P 500 1,348.86 18.35 (1.34%)
10-Yr Bond 3.818% 0.124


NYSE Volume 3,644,763,250
Nasdaq Volume 2,280,476,000

4:10 pm : Stocks posted a loss today with all three major indices losing more than 1% in today's session. Though the market opened modestly higher, stocks remained well into negative territory for the remainder of the day. Weighing on stocks was a negative response to comments from Fed Chairman Bernanke, along with weakness in the financial and technology sectors. Despite the downturn, stocks remain more than 1% higher for the week.

Fed Chairman Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Paulson, and SEC Chairman Cox testified before the Senate Banking Committee this afternoon. Bernanke alluded to the possibility the U.S. is nearing a recession and continued to emphasize downside risks to the economy, indicating the Fed will likely continue to ease interest rates. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Paulson continued to forecast slow growth. The Fed Chairman stated that financial companies will likely face further write-downs. Bernanke's comments had a noticeably negative effect on financial stocks.

FGIC has become the first major bond insurer to lose its AAA rating. Many pundits believe the loss of a major bond insurer's AAA rating could lead to a wave of further downgrades in the bond market. In turn, financial institutions could face another round of write-downs. Moody's noted, however, MBIA (MBI 12.62, +0.98) and Ambac (ABK 10.53, +1.16) are better positioned from a capitalization and business franchise perspective; their shares climbed higher in response to the comments. News of the downgrade sent stocks to their worst levels of the session, with selling interest concentrated in financials.

Within the tech sector, Intel (INTC 20.46, -0.75) was today's main laggard in the Dow. The company was removed from Goldman Sachs' Conviction Buy list due to economic concerns, according to the Associated Press. NVIDIA (NVDA 22.61, -4.41) reported earnings that bested expectations, but details of the company's report displeased market participants.

Comcast (CMCSA 19.24, +1.43) earned $0.20 per share in its most recent quarter. The result topped the consensus EPS forecast by $0.03. The company also announced it will begin issuing a quarterly dividend that translates to a 1.4% annual dividend yield relative to yesterday's closing price. That, along with repurchasing up to $6.9 billion in outstanding stock by 2009, reflects the company's renewed commitment to return capital to shareholders.

Jobless claims for the week ended Feb. 9 fell to 348,000 from the previous week's reading of 357,000. The number of filings was essentially in-line with economists' expectations and should be seen as a good sign since it is below levels that typically precede a recession. Additionally, the December trade deficit was better than expected. The deficit fell to $58.8 billion, down from $63.1 billion, suggesting an upward revision to the net exports component of fourth quarter GDP.

Crude prices finished the day more than $2.00 higher. The commodity closed at $95.43 per barrel. DJ30 -175.26 NASDAQ -41.39 NQ100 -1.9% R2K -2.3% SP400 -1.6% SP500 -18.35 NASDAQ Dec/Adv/Vol 2109/754/2.23 bln NYSE Dec/Adv/Vol 2465/681/1.40 bln

3:30 pm : Stocks have made a late-day pull off their session lows. Financials remain the session's main laggard, along with technology.

Despite a downgrade to FGIC's credit rating from AAA to A3, fellow bond insurers MBIA (MBI 12.88, +1.24) and Ambac (ABK 10.74, +1.37) are both trading higher. Ambac's CEO stated there is no question of the company's solvency, as reported by CNBC.DJ30 -106.73 NASDAQ -29.40 SP500 -9.68 NASDAQ Dec/Adv/Vol 2030/827/1.89 bln NYSE Dec/Adv/Vol 2356/774/1.11 bln

3:00 pm : Stocks have pushed lower to their worst levels of the session on news that FGIC has become the first major bond insurer to lose its coveted AAA rating, according to Reuters. Moody's cut the company's rating to A3.

Financials have been among today's most active stocks. Six financial firms are present in the ten most heavily traded names.DJ30 -153.23 NASDAQ -38.59 SP500 -14.96 NASDAQ Dec/Adv/Vol 2091/745/1.70 bln NYSE Dec/Adv/Vol 2441/689/977 mln
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TalkAgain Donating Member (89 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-14-08 09:03 PM
Response to Original message
46. What a day
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