• 06Sep

     
    Rumors move markets, especially the commodity markets. The story of the day is a rumor that corn yields will be lower than forecast. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) originally forecast corn yields to be 165 bushels per acre. However, with the weather being hotter and drier east of the Mississippi, yields could come in lower, as reported by the Associated Press.

    That sparked a rally in corn futures with the December contract up 17 cents to $4.64 per bushel (each one cent equals $50). Wheat prices are benefiting from the drought in Russia and Russia’s export ban. December wheat futures shot up 27.5 cents to $7.41 per bushel. Soybeans also were higher by 26 cents to $10.35 per bushel for the November contract.

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  • 31Aug

    U.S. President Barack Obama declared the U.S. combat mission in Iraq ended on Tuesday, but said the U.S. commitment to Iraq has not ended as he urged its leaders to quickly form an inclusive government.
    He also said in a White House speech that the United States is able to apply more resources in Afghanistan because of the change in Iraq, and that the pace of the U.S. drawdown in Afghanistan will depend on conditions on the ground, but start on schedule in July 2011.

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  • 26Aug

    Stockshakers bought FAS yesterday along with GLD the day before.

    Financials may rally here on the job numbers.

    For the most part this may just be short covering rally.

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  • 19Aug

    Mortgage Rates Hit Another Record Low: Freddie Mac
    Mortgage rates fell in the past week to the latest in a series of record lows amid concerns about the state of the U.S. economy, according to a survey released on Thursday by Freddie Mac, the second-largest U.S. mortgage finance company.

    Rock-bottom rates should continue to spur demand for home loan refinancing, putting extra cash into consumers’ hands that they can save, use to pay off existing debt or funnel into the economy through extra spending.

    Interest rates on U.S. 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, the most widely used loan, averaged 4.42 percent for the week ended August 19, down from the previous week’s 4.44 percent and its year-ago level of 5.12 percent, according to the survey.

    Thirty-year mortgage rates have fallen to fresh lows for nine straight weeks. Freddie Mac started the survey in April 1971.

    Meanwhile, 15-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 3.90 percent, down from 3.92 percent last week, the lowest since Freddie Mac began surveying this loan type in 1991. Fifteen-year mortgage rates have hit fresh lows in six straight weeks.

    “Investors in long-term bonds appear very confident that inflation will remain in check, and as a result long-term fixed mortgage rates have continued to fall,” Amy Crews Cutts, Freddie Mac deputy chief economist, said in a statement.

    Mortgage rates are linked to yields on Treasuries and yields on mortgage-backed securities.

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  • 11Aug

    The VIX is up 14%. Volatility returns with great force!

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  • 10Aug

     

    Fed says economic recovery likely to be more modest in near-term

    Fed to keep constant holdings of securities at current level

    Fed expects exceptionally low funds rate for extended period

    Fed announcement cuts market losses

    Fed to buy long-term Treasury debt, keeps target rate unchanged

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  • 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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  • 30Jul

    Recovery Loses Speed As Consumers Turn Cautious
    The economic recovery lost momentum in the second quarter as growth slowed to a
    2.4 percent pace, its most sluggish showing in nearly a year.

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  • 29Jul

    Economists see tepid recovery deep into 2011
    The U.S. economic recovery will remain slow deep into next year, held back by shoppers reluctant to spend and employers hesitant to hire, according to an Associated Press survey of leading economists.

    The latest quarterly AP Economy Survey shows economists have turned gloomier in the past three months. They foresee weaker growth and higher unemployment than they did before. As a result, the economists think the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates near zero until at least next spring.

    Yet despite their expectation of slower growth, a majority of the 42 economists surveyed believe the recovery remains on track, raising hopes that the economy can avoid falling back into a “double-dip” recession.

    The AP survey compiles forecasts of leading private, corporate and academic economists on a range of indicators, including employment, consumer spending and inflation. Among their forecasts:

    •Economic growth the rest of this year and early next year will weaken, to less than 3 percent. From January through May, the economy grew at roughly a 3.5 percent pace.
    •The unemployment rate will be no lower at the end of the year than it is now — 9.5 percent. A majority think it will be 2015 or later before the rate falls to a historically normal 5 percent.
    •State budget shortfalls pose a “significant” or “severe” risk to the national economy. The loss of tax revenue has forced state and local governments to cut services and lay off workers.
    The weak economy leaves Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill vulnerable as they head into the November midterm elections. Democrats, who now control both chambers, have the most to lose. The gloomier outlook is also a liability for President Barack Obama.

    The economists have turned more pessimistic since the recovery hit turbulence in May. Europe’s debt crisis sent tremors through Wall Street, causing stocks to tumble and raising doubts about the durability of the rebound.
    Since then, businesses have been slow to step up hiring. Americans’ confidence in the economy has declined, leading shoppers to reduce spending. And the housing market has weakened further with the end of a homebuyer tax credit that had buoyed sales earlier this year.

    Consumers aren’t leading this rebound, as they usually do, despite ultra-low borrowing costs. Their spending growth will weaken in the second half of this year and strengthen only slightly next year, a majority of economists said. They think shoppers’ reluctance to spend more money poses a “significant” or “severe” risk to the recovery.

    “It seems like we hit an air pocket in consumer spending,” said survey participant Richard DeKaser, president of Woodley Park Research.

    Kasey Doshier, a graphic designer in Chicago, said the recession taught her to rein in her spending. The key moment came early last year, when her employer cut her pay 15 percent to avoid layoffs.

    “I just lived paycheck to paycheck and had a good time,” said Doshier, 32. “It’s kind of scary to think that I am a paycheck away from being homeless.”

    Doshier’s pay has been reinstated, but she’s still watching her money. Dinner and drinks with friends are gone. Now she goes to free street festivals and the city pool. She explores Chicago neighborhoods by taking her dog on long “adventure walks.”

    The tight job market, scant pay raises and drooping home values are forcing others, too, to spend less and save more. Americans saved 4.2 percent of their disposable income last year. That was the highest level since 1998. Economists expect roughly the same level of saving this year and next.

    That’s why growth of less than 3 percent is forecast into 2011. And weak growth helps explain why unemployment is likely to stay high. It takes about 3 percent growth just to create enough jobs to keep pace with the population increase.

    Growth would have to equal 5 percent for a full year to drive the unemployment rate down by 1 percentage point. Neither the economists in the AP survey nor the Obama administration expects that to happen.

    The Fed’s outlook has turned bleaker, too. It’s why Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues are weighing new steps to invigorate the economy if the recovery shows signs of backsliding. They are also expected to hold interest rates at record lows longer than economists thought three months ago.

    A survey the Fed released Wednesday showed the economy facing a bumpy path back to health. The pace of economic activity remained modest in most of the country.

    Most economists surveyed said the Fed would being raising short-term rates no sooner than next spring. In the last survey, most had thought it could happen as soon as late this year.
    At the same time, state budget shortfalls have emerged as a major threat in the economists’ view. State and local governments cut their spending in the first three months of this year at a 3.8 percent pace. That was the biggest cutback since the second quarter of 1981, just before the economy entered a severe recession.

    When states and localities tighten spending by trimming services and jobs, the cutbacks ripple through the broader economy, causing individuals to spend less, too. The drop in state and local government spending shaved about half a percentage point off the U.S. gross domestic product in the first three months of this year.

    Nearly two-thirds of the economists view the states’ budget crises as a significant or severe threat to the rebound.

    Despite such risks, 55 percent of the economists described the recovery as “on track” as of the middle of the year. The rest said it was “faltering.”

    “There’s a risk that the loss of momentum will snowball and feed on itself, but I think in the end the recovery will stay on track,” predicted another survey participant, James O’Sullivan, global chief economist at MF Global.

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  • 28Jul

    Beige Book Makes It Official: Economy Has Slowed Down

    The latest Beige Book report from the U.S. Federal Reserve confirms what other recent economic reports have suggested: The U.S. economic recovery slowed somewhat in the second quarter, with some regions reporting stalled conditions.

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