• 10Aug

    There is a Fed rate announcement at 2:15pm ET on Tuesday
    10 August 2010. On the previous Fed Day the FOMC
    kept the rates in the 0% to 0.25% range.

    Fed expected to downgrade US growth outlook

     

    The Federal Reserve’s interest rate-setting panel will meet Tuesday, under pressure to bolster a weak economic recovery that many fear is grinding to a halt.

    The 10-member body is expected to downgrade its assessment of the health of the world’s largest economy, as it keeps interest rates at historic lows.

    The Fed’s policies have come under the microscope in recent months, as investors asked whether the central bank was overly rosy in its previous assessments, calling its credibility into question.

    In June, the Fed said the economic recovery was “proceeding” despite headwinds and would remain “moderate for a time.”

    That language — which is eagerly watched by investors — may now be revised to reflect a dramatic slowdown in the pace of the recovery.

    “It will be hard to take the Fed seriously if a more forthright acceptance of the array of softer data is not forthcoming,” said Ian Shepherdson of High Frequency Economics.

    The scale of the slowdown was laid bare last week, when the Labor Department reported 131,000 jobs were lost in July, far more than expected.

    On Monday, researchers at the San Francisco regional Fed ditched the ordinarily couched language of central bankers to warn a double dip recession was possible.

    “A recessionary relapse is a significant possibility sometime in the next two years,” researchers Travis Berge and Oscar Jorda wrote, adding that “the policies that are adopted today could play a decisive role in shaping the pace of growth.”

    Fed watchers will be looking for any hint of a change in those polices Tuesday, specifically a return to stimulus spending that marked the depths of the recession.

    The bank battled the financial crisis by spending more than one trillion dollars, buying up Treasury bonds, mortgage-backed securities and other financial instruments to lubricate markets.

    The Federal Reserve may take a tiny step in that direction by reinvesting cash from maturing bonds rather than shrinking its portfolio.

    Analysts say that could mean spending anywhere between 100-300 billion dollars over the next year.

    “The FOMC faces a tough meeting tomorrow with the market pricing in either a significant change to the statement or, indeed, renewed moves to stimulate the economy, such as re-investing maturing coupons on bond holdings,” said UBS analysts in a note to clients.

    But some market-watchers doubt the Fed will take such drastic action without a more explicit threat to the recovery.

    “Other than implicitly marking down its near term growth outlook, we expect the tone of the FOMC to not be substantially different than June,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief US economist at Deutsche Bank.

    “We do not expect the Fed to symbolically announce that it plans to reinvest maturing mortgage backed securities back into the market.

    LaVorgna indicated even a modest shift in policy such as altering the interest paid on banks’ excess reserves held at the Fed could upset fragile markets.

    “We do not expect the Fed to cut the interest on reserves either, as that would wreak havoc.”

    Most analysts expect the Fed to ply a middle course, setting out what it will do if things get worse.

    “The committee is likely to define what can be done in terms of monetary policy, if the macroeconomic situation were to worsen in the near future,” said Thomas Julien of Natixis.

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  • 15May

    Bank-Failures swell to 72 for 2010
    State regulators shuttered small banks in Illinois, Missouri, Georgia and Michigan, including a 23-branch community bank that failed despite having received an infusion from the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program.

    So far this year, 72 banks have collapsed and the spate of failures is expected to continue throughout 2010. Although there are signs that the worst of the financial crisis may be over for the banking industry, financial institutions are still being battered by severe losses on mortgages and commercial real-estate loans.

    In the largest of Friday’s closures, Illinois regulators closed Midwest Bank & Trust Co. of Elmwood Park. FirstMerit Corp., based in Akron, Ohio, agreed to take over Midwest’s 23 branches, $2.42 billion in deposits and essentially all of its $3.17 billion in assets.

    Midwest had been warning for months that it was in dire financial straits. On Thursday, the bank said in a securities filing that it would likely be placed into receivership because it had been unable to raise fresh capital after a previous plan had been rejected by the Federal Reserve.

    Its failure is a financial blow to the government, which had previously swapped the preferred shares that it held in Midwest for common shares. The government had received the preferred shares when it injected Midwest with $84.8 million of TARP funds. Common shareholders typically are wiped out when a bank fails.

    FirstMerit, which has been a bidder on other failed banks, agreed to pay the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. a premium of 0.4% for Midwest’s deposits. FirstMerit also entered into a loss-sharing transaction on $2.27 billion of Midwest’s assets.

    As part of the deal, the FDIC will receive a so-called value appreciation instrument, which will provide the agency with additional money if FirstMerit’s share price rises over a certain amount of time.

    Midwest was the 11th bank to fail in Illinois so far this year.

    Elsewhere, regulators in Georgia, Illinois and Michigan closed three one-branch banks.

    In Georgia, state regulators seized Satilla Community Bank, of Saint Marys, Ga. Ameris Bank, based in Moultrie, Ga., agreed to assume all of the deposits and most of its assets. Satilla had $135.7 million in assets and $134 million in deposits at March 31.

    Ameris, which is paying a premium of 0.19% to assume Satilla’s deposits, also entered into a loss-sharing agreement with the FDIC. It was the eighth bank failure of the year in Georgia.

    Michigan regulators closed Plymouth-based New Liberty Bank, which had roughly $109.1 million in assets and $101.8 million in deposits. Bank of Ann Arbor, based in Ann Arbor, assumed all of the deposits and agreed to buy nearly all of the assets. It didn’t pay a premium for the deposits.

    In Missouri, regulators closed Southwest Community Bank, based in Springfield. Its $96.6 million in assets and $102.5 million in deposits are being assumed by Simmons First National Bank, of Pine Bluff, Ark.

    The FDIC estimated the four failures would cost $301.7 million to its deposit insurance fund.

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  • 09May

     

    E.U. Offers $957 Billion Rescue Package

    European leaders, pressured by sliding markets and doubts over their ability to act in unison, agreed on Sunday to provide a huge rescue package of nearly one trillion dollars in a sweeping effort to regain lost credibility with investors.

    After more than 10 hours of talks, finance ministers from the European Union agreed on a deal that would provide $560 billion in new loans and $76 billion under an existing lending program. Elena Salgado, the Spanish finance minister, who announced the deal, also said the International Monetary Fund was prepared to give up to $321 billion separately.

    Officials are hoping the size of the program - a total of $957 billion - will signal a “shock and awe” commitment that will be viewed in the same vein as the $700 billion package the United States government provided to help its own ailing financial institutions in 2008.

    The leaders were making yet another attempt to stem a debt crisis that has engulfed Europe and global markets. Underscoring the urgency, President Obama spoke to the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, and the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, on Sunday about the need for decisive action to restore investor confidence.

    New political complications in two of Europe’s most important countries added to the challenge. In Germany, voter anger at the effort to save Greece cost Ms. Merkel an important regional election Sunday, undermining her leadership , and in Britain, the government remained in a state of suspended animation because of the inconclusive Parliamentary elections last week.

    The package comes at a time of mounting financial unease. Riots in Greece, ever-tightening terms of credit and the unexplained free fall in the American stock market last Thursday have compounded the sense that the European Union’s inability to address its sovereign debt crisis might lead to the type of systemic collapse that followed the fall of Lehman Brothers.

    What appeared to be emerging from the discussions represented a partial retreat from a system discussed earlier in the day that would have radically expanded the powers of the European Commission to raise funds.

    Instead, the diplomats said, the ministers were discussing an alternative — a system that would speed up the pace at which states that use the euro currency could lend to one another, but on a bilateral and voluntary basis. The diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions were ongoing.

    The diplomats said that the I.M.F. would be expected to play some role in an overall aid package. But they said the fund’s contribution probably would remain separate to the loan guarantees offered by euro-area member states and loans managed by the European Commission.

    An I.M.F. contribution of 220 billion euros would bring the total of new loan guarantees to 720 billion euros, or more than $900 billion.

    While the sums being discussed are eye-catching, some bankers questioned whether they would be enough to calm the markets. One banker said that with more and more European economies coping with rising deficits that raising, guaranteeing or backing such a large number would not be an easy task — unless the European Central Bank stepped in a more forceful and specific manner. The bank has so far rebuffed calls to inject liquidity into the markets by buying back European bonds.

    There were many complications in trying to forge a consensus on a new package. They included defining the role of Britain, which lies outside the euro zone and had said it would not help in propping up the euro, as well as the European Central Bank. The fractiousness underscores the frailty of a monetary union in which its richest member, Germany, is also the most opposed to a financial rescue.

    “The fact that they are worried is clear,” said David Marsh, the author of the Euro, a book on the history of monetary union. “But I don’t think that there is enough commitment or economic firepower in Germany to provide the massive loan guarantees to satisfy the markets.”

    Predictably, politicians blamed speculators for the market upheaval. The Swedish finance minister, Anders Borg, said immediate action was needed to tackle “herd behaviors in the markets that are really pack behaviors, wolf pack behaviors.” Mr. Borg warned that volatility in markets could “tear the weaker countries apart.”

    Since it became clear that Greece would not be able to meet its financial obligations and fears spread that other indebted nations like Spain, Portugal and Ireland would have similar troubles, Europe, hampered by Germany’s opposition to a bail out, has responded with measures that have been seen as too little too late.

    Even now, despite the lashing rhetoric and the Sunday night pan European meeting, there is still a feeling that Europe should be doing more — notably with regard to freeing the European Central Bank to go against its charter and print money by buying back distressed European bonds from the secondary market.

    Sunday’s meetings represented an extraordinary convergence of diplomatic activity, crammed into a tight time frame. Political leaders including President Nicolas Sarkozy of France said early Saturday morning, at the end of an earlier summit meeting, that a loan mechanism intended to restore confidence should be ready by Monday morning. That effectively left the European Commission and finance ministers a single weekend to change the way the European Union operates its finances.

    Ms. Merkel of Germany attended a victory parade on Red Square in Moscow on Sunday, a sign of how seriously Germans consider reconciliation with Russia. Mr. Sarkozy and the Italian prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, opted not to attend, regarding the financial crisis as more urgent.

    Mr. Sarkozy held a strategy meeting with key ministers on Sunday.

    “At stake is the euro and the euro zone,” a French official said. “We need to give a clear signal to markets.” He declined to be identified because talks among the finance ministers were continuing.As a larger European rescue was being debated, the International Monetary Fund’s executive board took the expected step of approving the fund’s $38 billion loan to Greece. And as officials said that the loan would take care of Greece’s financing needs through 2012 they acknowledged that market turmoil had persisted in spite of the Greece plan.

    “It’s clear from the developments of the past few days that there is broader stress in the financial markets beyond Greece,” said John P. Lipsky, the fund’s first deputy managing director.

    In response to questions about aiding other troubled economies in Europe, Mr. Lipsky emphasized, “There are no program negotiations at this time with either Portugal or Spain.”

    Tags:

  • 19Dec

     

     

    Seven U.S. banks closed by regulators 140 have failed in 2009

     

    Seven U.S. banks were closed by regulators on Friday, bring the total this year to 140 as the effects of the credit crisis continued to be felt across the country.

    What’s more, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. established temporary institutions to help close two of the failed banks.

    Atlanta-based RockBridge Commercial Bank became the 25th Georgia-based bank to fail this year. The FDIC was unable to find another institution to take over the failed bank, and so will mail checks to retail depositors for insured funds.

    RockBridge Commercial Bank had roughly $294 million in assets and $291.7 million in deposits as of Sept. 30. Its failure will cost the federal deposit-insurance fund $124.2 million, the regulator said.

    Panama City, Fla.-based Peoples First Community Bank became the 14th to fail in that state in 2009. Peoples First Community Bank had $1.7 billion in deposits as of Sept. 30, and Gulfport, Miss.-based Hancock Bank has agreed to assume those deposits.

    Peoples First Community Bank’s failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $556.7 million, according to the FDIC.

    New Baltimore, Mich.-based Citizens State Bank’s failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $76.6 million, with the FDIC creating the Deposit Insurance National Bank of New Baltimore to protect depositors of Citizens State Bank.

    The new bank will remain open for 45 days to allow depositors to access insured deposits and open an account elsewhere, the agency said. Columbus, Ohio-based Huntington National Bank will operate the DINB under contract with the FDIC.

    An FDIC spokesman said the agency has created such bridge banks “several times this year and in previous years.”

    Irondale, Ala.-based New South Federal Savings Bank also was closed by regulators Friday. The bank had $1.2 billion in deposits as of Sept. 30, which will be assumed by Plano, Texas-based Beal Bank, the FDIC added.

    New South Federal Savings Bank’s failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $212.3 million.

    Springfield, Ill.-based Independent Bankers’ Bank was closed, with $511.5 million in deposits as of Sept. 30.

    The FDIC said it created the Independent Bankers’ Bank Bridge Bank to allow client banks of Independent Bankers’ Bank “to maintain their correspondent banking relationship with the least amount of disruption.”

    Independent Bankers’ Bank’s failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $68.4 million.

    Two Southern California banks were closed Friday, the 16th and 17th such failures in the Golden State as a whole.

    First Federal Bank of California in Santa Monica was taken over by regulators. OneWest Bank of Pasadena will assume all of its deposits and take over First Federal’s 39 branches, the FDIC said.

    OneWest Bank agreed to purchase all of the $6.1 billion in First Federal Bank assets and did not pay the FDIC a premium for the $4.5 billion in total deposits; the hit to the deposit-insurance fund will be $146 million.

    Separately, La Jolla, Calif.-based Imperial Capital Bank was closed. It had $2.8 billion in deposits as of Sept. 30, the FDIC said, and its failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $619.2 million. City National Bank of Los Angeles is assuming all of the deposits in the “least costly” resolution, according to the agency.

    Tags:

  • 18Dec

     

    Credit card’s newest trick: 79.9 percent interest
    First Premier card carries heavy interest rate

    It’s no mistake. This credit card’s interest rate is 79.9 percent.

    The bloated APR is how First Premier Bank, a subprime credit card issuer, is skirting new regulations intended to curb abusive practices in the industry. It’s a strategy other subprime card issuers could start adopting to get around the new rules.

    Typically, the First Premier card comes with a minimum of $256 in fees in the first year for a credit line of $250. Starting in February, however, a new law will cap such fees at 25 percent of a card’s credit line.

    In a recent mailing for a preapproved card, First Premier lowers fees to just that limit — $75 in the first year for a credit line of $300. But the new law doesn’t set a cap on interest rates. Hence the 79.9 APR, up from the previous 9.9 percent.

    “It’s the highest on the market. It’s the highest we’ve ever seen,” said Anuj Shahani, an analyst with Synovate, a research firm that tracks credit card mailings.

    The terms are eyebrow raising, but First Premier targets people with bad credit who likely can’t get approved for cards elsewhere. It’s a group that tends to lean heavily on credit too, meaning they’ll likely incur steep financing charges.

    So for a $300 balance, a cardholder would pay $20 a month in interest.

    First Premier said the 79.9 APR offer is a test and that it’s too early to tell whether it will be continued, according to an e-mailed statement. To comply with the new law, the bank said it will no longer offer the card that has $256 in first-year fees as of Feb. 21, 2010. However, customers will still be able to use their existing cards.

    According to First Premier’s Web site, the credit cards are issued by its sister organization Premier Bankcard. The company, based in Sioux Falls, S.D., says Premier Bankcard is the 10th largest issuer of MasterCard and Visa cards in the country, with more than 3.5 million customers.

    In a mailing sent to prospective customers in October with the revamped terms, First Premier writes “…you might have less-than-perfect credit and we’re OK with that.” The letter notes that an online application or phone call is still required, but guarantees a 60-second status confirmation.

    The letter also states there are no hidden fees that aren’t disclosed in the attached form. That’s where the 79.9 percent interest rate and $75 annual fee are listed. There’s also $29 penalty if you pay late or go over your credit limit. The credit limit is $300.

    The bank did not say how many people were offered the 79.9 APR card, but noted that it needed to “price our product based on the risk associated with this market.”

    Even if First Premier doesn’t stick with the 79.9 APR, it will likely hike rates considerably from the current 9.9 percent to offset the lower fees, said Shahani of Synovate.

    The revamped terms may not be the only changes; First Premier also appears to be moving away from the riskiest borrowers.

    The bank typically mails offers to subprime households, meaning those with credit scores below 700. In the third quarter, however, 84 percent of its offers were sent to subprime households, down from 91 percent the same period last year, according to Synovate.

    First Premier could be cleaning up its credit card portfolio since the new regulations will limit its ability to raise interest rates. That could mean First Premier won’t issue cards as liberally to those with bad credit.

    As harsh as First Premier’s terms seem, that could be a blow to those who rely on the card, said Odysseas Papadimitriou, CEO of CardHub.com.

    “Even when the cost of credit is astronomical, for people in true emergencies, it’s much better than not having access to credit,” said Papadimitriou.

    Until Feb. 21, First Premier is still offering its even-higher-fee card online. So the price for credit the bank charges is at least $256 in first-year fees.

    Tags:

  • 15Dec

    Even with the spectre of a potential sell day Stockshakers remain bullish. As the fear increases along with the certainty that the bull market has ran too far too fast, Stockshakers looks to the 2003 market and economic conditions as a possible reference point.
    2009 was a challenge and 2010 doesn’t look much easier, sure there will be this looming overhead resistance on equities markets but is the level enough to create a problem for traders?

    Look at the lows reached by many equities in the first quarter of 2009 and you will see the over reaction from the fallout of 2008. Sure this is the Great recession and it will always be remembered as one of the big ones, and while we are not out of the woods yet, Stockshakers sees the potential for the ull to gain traction here and continue into February of 2010.

    The U.S. Government and the Fed of the US will continue to stimulate the economy to begin the start of job generation. The key to recovery is Jobs and liquidity. Banks must start loaning money and the captiol machine must be stoked to deliver real lasting and effective results.

    The return of competition to the market place is a welcome sight, we may just see jobs start to pop up.

    For the trading day watch for reversals and a rise in volatility. Always check the World Bank for news announcements.

    Approved
    Middle East and North Africa: Over $5.5 Billion in New Investment for Clean Energy Technology
    The Clean Technology Fund (CTF), a multi-donor trust fund that facilitates the deployment of low-carbon technologies, approved financing of $750 million on December 2, 2009 for Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) programs in five countries in the Middle East and North Africa: Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, and Tunisia. The CTF will mobilize an additional $4.85 billion from other sources to support the deployment of about 1 gigawatt of CSP generation capacity, support associated transmission infrastructure in the Maghreb and Mashreq, and leverage public and private investments for CSP power plants.

    Clean Air - CLEN & CLNX

     

    Have a great trading day www.stockshakers.com

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  • 11Nov

    -Gold hits record in six of last eight sessions
    -SPDR Gold Trust holdings unchanged on Wed
      

     Gold hit a record high on Wednesday
    for the second straight day as investors focused on the precious
    metal’s appeal as a hedge against a weakening dollar.
        Risk tolerance was also increasing after strong factory
    output data from China pointed to a strengthening global economy,
    boosting commodities prices and another factor supporting the
    precious metal.
        Gold is often seen as a hedge against energy price-led
    inflation.
        “The euro clawed back above $1.500 and oil steadied near $80
    (a barrel). Japanese stocks are extending their gains. Everything
    looks good for gold,” said Shuji Sugata, a manager at Mitsubishi
    Corp Futures’ research team.
        Spot gold XAU stood at $1,119.35 an ounce as of 0059 GMT
    after rising to a record $1,120.30, compared with New York’s
    notional close of $1,117.45..
        Bullion has now renewed record highs for six out of the past
    eight sessions.
        U.S. gold futures for December delivery traded at
    $1,121.00 an ounce. The contract earlier rose to a fresh record
    of $1,121.20.
        But interest in gold exchange-traded funds remained soft,
    with holdings of the largest bullion-backed ETF, New York’s SPDR
    Gold Trust, at 1,114.443 tonnes on Wednesday, unchanged
    since Nov. 9.
        
      Precious metals prices at 0110 GMT
     Metal             Last    Change  Pct chg  YTD pct chg  Turnover
     Spot Gold        1120.20    2.75   +0.25     27.27
     Spot Silver        17.70    0.13   +0.74     56.36
     Spot Platinum    1377.00    9.00   +0.66     47.75
     Spot Palladium    345.50    4.00   +1.17     87.26
     Euro/Dollar       1.5010
     Dollar/Yen         89.87 
     prices in yen per gram, except silver which is
     priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce.

  • 07Nov

    Gold futures top $1,100/oz for first time
    Gold falls on investor disappointment, eyes $1,100
     
    Gold futures in New York rose to a record above $1,100 per ounce on Friday as the dollar eased in the wake of disappointing U.S. employment data.

    At 9:48 a.m. EST (1448 GMT) December gold GCZ9 was up $10.20 at $1,099.50 an ounce at the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, having topped at $1,101.90 in morning trade.

    Spot gold XAU= reached a record at $1,100.90 per ounce.

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  • 25Sep

    Simple rule take your lead from the movement of the US Dollar Futures.
    Stockshakers are continuing to trade the YM at the inverse of the US Dollar future movements. When will they decouple? Who knows but until then this has been a very lucrative strategy.

    Trading Idea? BBI has been hit pretty hard and at 1.12 may start to catch a bid in this range. Stockshakers are seeking to go long the equity and the October 2.50 calls. is the current trading idea Stockshakers are utilizing.

    The exit point should be after a 5% gain from the point the equity reverses to the upside. Institutional support will come back in here soon in an effort to right the ship.
    We just want to rent the equity long enough to catch our 5% from the equity and the option may bring in some additional gains, we shall see.

    Keep your stops tight the news is not all Rosy right now, Housing numbers are not pretty.

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  • 20Aug

    Markets rallied enough on Thursday for Stockshakers to reverse positions and go long.
    Open call or equity positions on:

     

    ADI
    MICC
    WFC
    HNBC
    ZION
    FAS
    GMCR
    LNC
    DEI
    CREE
    URI
    TEN
    RIMM
    AAPL
    GOOG
    CMG
    ANF
    RHI
    SIRI
    BAC
    F
    ACTU
    AIG
    XIDE
    ACP
    CLI
    CAB
    OWW
    STI
    WRI
    VTR
    EXPE
    PDCO
    CX
    CSCO
    RRC
    HIG
    DIA

    Sellers cleared out of the way during the regular session. The after hours session saw sellers and the overnight futures showed an intensified selling pace on the mini Dow futures. The key for Friday’s session will be the U.S. Dollar and the relationship to commodities and equities. If the U.S. Dollar continues to slide the rally will stall. Stay prepared to cover and keep the stops tight.

    Have a great weekend.

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