Your source to global events that impact the economic recovery and other musings for the not so faint-hearted.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Friday, December 23, 2011
Lacking a Grand Plan on Debt Crisis, Europe Limps Ahead
In 2011, European leaders have been unswerving in their commitment to muddling through.
Not for them grand or decisive moves to resolve the euro zone's twin government and bank financial crises. Instead, they have settled on a series of smaller gestures, over which they have haggled publicly beforehand and often afterward. Some actions may have helped their currency union hobble through the year; others will at best reduce the chances of a future crisis. READ MORE...
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Banker Leads Charge of Spanish Knights
Spain's Rajoy Picks Investment Banker for Finance Post
MADRID—Mariano Rajoy, Spain's newly elected prime minister, selected a well-known former deputy finance minister and investment banker to spearhead his government's efforts to pull the euro zone's fourth-largest economy out of its worst crisis in decades.
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
ECB Sees Record Refinancing Demand
Hundreds of euro-zone lenders took out a total of €489.19 billion ($639.96 billion) in low-interest loans from the European Central Bank on Wednesday, as the currency area extended a massive financial lifeline to its struggling banking industry.
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Friday, December 9, 2011
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Austerity in the U.K. Regarded as Obsolete
The Source for the WSJ reports: For all the howls of Keynesian outrage at the austerity that’s crushing the U.K. economy, one little point seems to be missed: the U.K. government’s plans are to spend more money in each of the coming years than in the previous year. REVIEW FURTHER
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Monday, December 5, 2011
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Saturday, December 3, 2011
The Winter of Forgotten Hope
By Grant de Graf
A chilly breeze blows across the Alps as winter approaches and politicians continue to search for an economic solution to what is being called the mother of all sovereign debt crises.
Europe spent years of dedicated service in building the Euro with its respective European partners, producing a currency that represented a significant part of the global economy. Today the vision which politicians rallied to support, lies in virtual tethers.
Tony Blair, former British Prime Minister, predicts that Europe has weeks to decide, whether the Euro has legs. German Chancellor Merkel has issued a call for unity and stronger financial discipline among members. Does that mean that the end is nigh? Economically speaking almost everyone agrees, including the leading players within the EU, that in order to survive the Euro has to undergo some fundamental changes. Seemingly there is somewhat of a mismatch between the political determination of European leaders to protect its currency and the viability of the economic blueprint that is associated with the Euro. One ponders whether Europe's leaders have the economic skill and face to be able to structure a plan that can save Europe. Sometimes it takes a greater sense of courage and wisdom to release the eagle from capture, than to ensnare it. The art of falconry was never Europe's strong point.
HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
A chilly breeze blows across the Alps as winter approaches and politicians continue to search for an economic solution to what is being called the mother of all sovereign debt crises.
Europe spent years of dedicated service in building the Euro with its respective European partners, producing a currency that represented a significant part of the global economy. Today the vision which politicians rallied to support, lies in virtual tethers.
Tony Blair, former British Prime Minister, predicts that Europe has weeks to decide, whether the Euro has legs. German Chancellor Merkel has issued a call for unity and stronger financial discipline among members. Does that mean that the end is nigh? Economically speaking almost everyone agrees, including the leading players within the EU, that in order to survive the Euro has to undergo some fundamental changes. Seemingly there is somewhat of a mismatch between the political determination of European leaders to protect its currency and the viability of the economic blueprint that is associated with the Euro. One ponders whether Europe's leaders have the economic skill and face to be able to structure a plan that can save Europe. Sometimes it takes a greater sense of courage and wisdom to release the eagle from capture, than to ensnare it. The art of falconry was never Europe's strong point.
HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Friday, December 2, 2011
Germany Hits Panic Button
BERLIN—German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Friday made an urgent appeal for decisive political action—including quick changes to the European treaty—to fix the root causes of the euro-zone debt crisis that threatens to unravel Europe's single currency and plunge the global economy into recession. REVIEW
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Austerity May Sink Greece As Thousands Protest
ATHENS—Thousands of demonstrators marched through the streets of the Greek capital on Thursday in opposition to government overhauls, a few days before lawmakers start debating a 2012 austerity budget. READ MORE...
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Weak Manufacturing In Euro Zone, China Darkens Global Outlook
The outlook for the global economy deteriorated Thursday, with surveys showing manufacturing activity contracted at an accelerated pace in the euro zone and U.K. in November and shrank for the first time in nearly three years in China. But the U.S., where factory activity expanded, managed to buck the trend.
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
World-Wide Factory Activity, by Country
As the world sinks deeper into crisis and central banks around the globe rally to restore economic order, the single statistic that veteran analysts are viewing with hawked eyes, is World-Wide Factory Activity, by Country. This is the what they are seeing. VIEW THE INTERACTIVE...
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
What Are Fed Swap Lines and What Do They Do?
What Are Fed Swap Lines and What Do They Do?
"The Federal Reserve moved in coordinated action with foreign central banks this morning in order to provide a pressure-release valve for funding markets without exposing the U.S. central bank to much risk." READ MORE
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"The Federal Reserve moved in coordinated action with foreign central banks this morning in order to provide a pressure-release valve for funding markets without exposing the U.S. central bank to much risk." READ MORE
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Central Banks Take Coordinated Action
Central Banks Take Coordinated Action
WASHINGTON — The world's major central banks launched a joint action to provide cheap, emergency U.S. dollar loans to banks in Europe and elsewhere, a sign of growing alarm among policy makers about stresses in Europe and in the global financial system.
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WASHINGTON — The world's major central banks launched a joint action to provide cheap, emergency U.S. dollar loans to banks in Europe and elsewhere, a sign of growing alarm among policy makers about stresses in Europe and in the global financial system.
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Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Crisis in Europe Tightens Credit Across the Globe
Spanish Retail Sales Crash
MADRID—Spain's retail sales fell at their fastest pace in four months in October, the country's national statistics agency INE said Tuesday, the latest indication of a likely late-year contraction in the euro zone's fourth-largest economy.
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
3 Reasons Europe Is Failing To Act
Despite recent progress toward necessary fiscal reforms in Greece, Italy and Spain, bond investors have been abandoning European markets anddriving up yields. READ MORE...
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Ireland Enduring a Long Age of Austerity
Ireland enters its second year in the ungentle embrace of its bailout providers facing a further €3.8 billion ($5 billion) of budget cuts. It is by general acclamation the star pupil among the growing group of euro-zone members that have lost the confidence of bond investors, and the closest thing the currency area has to a success story. READ MORE...
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Five lessons for making a difference in the world
But after nearly four decades of making small business “microloans” to women in the world’s poorest communities with my organization, FINCA International, I have developed a view as to what are the most important ingredients for success in social entrepreneurship READ MORE.
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Monday, November 28, 2011
Euro Bounces on Debt Solution Hope
Things are so bad, trader mentality suggesting that things can only get better.
European Economic Outlook and Level of Confidence Deteriates Significantly
PARIS—The global economic outlook has deteriorated significantly, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said Monday, as it urged the European Central Bank to act decisively to prevent the euro-zone sovereign debt crisis from deepening and possibly dragging the U.S. economy to the brink of recession. READ MORE...
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Central Banks Ease Most Since 2009 to Avert Contagion
Euro area crisis threatens EU sovereign ratings: Moody's | Reuters
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Debt Crisis Is a Symptom of Wider Failings
The crisis has only ever been partly about the sustainability of the sovereign debts of Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Italy and Spain. More crucially, it has always been a political crisis, an institutional crisis, a crisis of governance. READ MORE
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Euro Zone Moves to Address Monetary and Fiscal Imbalance
BERLIN—Euro-zone countries are weighing a new plan to accelerate the integration of their fiscal policies, people familiar with the matter said, as Europe's leaders race to convince investors they can resolve the region's debt crisis and keep the currency area from fracturing. READ MORE
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Friday, November 25, 2011
Ireland, Portugal Woes Pose Risks
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Options Dwindle for Euro Crisis
The biggest question in Europe isn't what it was a few weeks ago. It is no longer just whether any of the 17 governments in the euro zone will default on its debts; increasingly it is whether the euro zone will survive in its current form at all...READ MORE.
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HEADLINE NEWS * MARKET NEWS * SENTIMENT * TRENDING * BONDS * FOREX
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Euro Bonds: The Pros and Cons, According to the European Commission
Monday, November 21, 2011
The Reason Why the Euro in its Current State Will Not Continue
European Credit Crisis Set To Change Political Map
By Grant de Graf
The historic landslide victory by Spain's conservative opposition party, at the election polls, is yet another sign that the credit crisis is changing the European political map. The electorate will not buy into austerity, as has been evident by the riots in Greece and demonstrations in Spain, Portugal and Italy. Running a balanced budget or keeping a deficit in check, may be a practical blueprint to running a healthy economy, but it is not a plan that will provide a quick-fix solution to an economy that is ailing. On the contrary, irrespective of the political ramifications, it will only serve to undermine efforts by a government to restore economic prosperity.
Additionally, the communities in Germany and France will never be satisfied with financing the lunch bars of Europe's poor, which only highlights the inadequacies of the European Union. This is the asset test for the feasibility of such a union: whether tax payers are prepared to pay for the less fortunate in another country that is part of the union. Ultimately, Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain (PIGS) must exit the Euro for those economies to benefit from a fluctuating exchange rate, to resolve the incongruousness that prevails in those markets. Ireland may survive the cut, due to the strong economic ties that it has with Britain. In the end, a Euro with Germany and France making up 90% of its constituency could survive and provide somewhat of an argument for its sustainability, even though weaknesses to the model still exist.
By Grant de Graf
The historic landslide victory by Spain's conservative opposition party, at the election polls, is yet another sign that the credit crisis is changing the European political map. The electorate will not buy into austerity, as has been evident by the riots in Greece and demonstrations in Spain, Portugal and Italy. Running a balanced budget or keeping a deficit in check, may be a practical blueprint to running a healthy economy, but it is not a plan that will provide a quick-fix solution to an economy that is ailing. On the contrary, irrespective of the political ramifications, it will only serve to undermine efforts by a government to restore economic prosperity.
Additionally, the communities in Germany and France will never be satisfied with financing the lunch bars of Europe's poor, which only highlights the inadequacies of the European Union. This is the asset test for the feasibility of such a union: whether tax payers are prepared to pay for the less fortunate in another country that is part of the union. Ultimately, Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain (PIGS) must exit the Euro for those economies to benefit from a fluctuating exchange rate, to resolve the incongruousness that prevails in those markets. Ireland may survive the cut, due to the strong economic ties that it has with Britain. In the end, a Euro with Germany and France making up 90% of its constituency could survive and provide somewhat of an argument for its sustainability, even though weaknesses to the model still exist.
Conservative Party Victorious in Spanish Election
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Friday, November 18, 2011
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
For first time, nations mull Greek exit from euro
Ever since the idea of the euro currency really took off in the late 1980s, it has been accepted wisdom that entry was forever. But now, with no less than the leaders of France and Germany conceding that Greece could leave the euro, everyone is scrambling to figure out exactly what would happen. More »
Bruce Bartlett: The Balanced Budget Amendment Delusion
This week the House of Representatives will take up a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution. An idea that has been kicking around for ages, it has never overcome the hurdle of needing a two-thirds approval vote in both houses of Congress. (After which it would not require the president’s signature but would need to be ratified by three-quarters of the states to take effect.)
Middle-Class Areas Shrink as Income Gap Grows, New Report Finds
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Paul Krugman: The World's Two Most Impressive Economies Have One Thing In Common
In a debate going on tonight in Canada between David Rosenberg, Paul Krugman, Larry Summers, and Ian Bremmer, the attendees were asked what they would do for the Canadian economy.
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