Forex Blog

June 30, 2010

Oil Falls Below $77

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 1:18 pm

Oil fell to $76.79 in Europe today following yesterday’s stock market losses. News that Germany’s jobless rate declined to 7.5 per cent helped give European stocks a much-needed boost, although most Asian stock markets fell following a 2.7 per cent drop Tuesday in the Dow Jones industrial average.

Investors are now bracing for the US Non-Farm Payroll employment report due Friday morning.

“We don’t see Friday’s jobs report saving us from what seems to be course set for a double-dip recession,” analyst Cameron Hanover said in a report.

Source: Associated Press

June 15, 2010

Spain Forced to Pay Higher Premiums to Attract Buyers

Within hours of claiming that it was in significantly better shape than Greece and would therefore not need a bailout, Spain was forced to increase premiums in order to auction 5.2 billion euros (US$6.4 billion) in 12- and 18-month T-bills. Rumors persist that Moody’s is re-evaluating Spain’s AAA rating especially in light of yesterday’s sudden downgrading for Greece.

Last Friday Spain’s economy ministry denied it had made a request for economic aid from the EU, after a German newspaper report that Brussels was preparing to activate a package in case Madrid asked for it.

Source: Reuters

May 27, 2010

China’s Vote of Confidence in the EU Boosts Global Markets

For those requiring further proof that the balance of power within the global economy has shifted to China and away from the US, today’s surge in the markets should provide ample evidence that change is afoot. Describing as “groundless” rumors that China was questioning its stake in European holdings, a statement posted on the State Administration of Foreign Exchange website noted that “Europe has been, and will be one of the major markets for investing China’s exchange reserves”.

Investors were so emboldened by this shot of confidence, the resulting buying spree lifted the Standard & Poors 500 Index back above 10,000 points soon after the market opened. The endorsement also helped reverse the euro’s slide that had been threatening to hit a four-year low.

Commodities also gained with crude for July delivery jumping 3.3 percent to $73.88 a barrel by mid-day trading in New York. This helped the Canadian dollar regain some of its recent losses to its US counterpart when investors abandoned the “loonie” for the perceived safety of the greenback earlier in the week. By 11:00 AM in New York, the Canadian currency was up more than a cent and half to 94.70 US cents.

China’s showing of support for the euro was without question, largely responsible for today’s new-found optimism, but events in Europe itself also contributed to the positive mood. Announcing plans to trim spending, two of the EU’s “problem children” were clearly hoping to send a message to investors – but also the EU and the International Monetary Fund – that they were confronting their respective budget gaps.

By a margin of a single vote, Spain’s parliament approved a plan that would reduce government spending by 15 billion euros (US$18.4 billion). Italy also recently outlined spending cuts totaling 24 billion euros (US$37.3 billion) over the next two years. It would seem that all it takes is an economic crisis of unmatched precedence, to help Europe’s chronic over-spenders see the light and take actions towards greater financial responsibility. If only that were true.

Unfortunately, I believe it is a little early to proclaim that Italy and Spain have seen the light. The measures barely received government approval in Spain, and Italy’s Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is also facing pressure at home to ease up on all the talk about spending cuts. We’ll see how resolute the respective leaders are if and when they face the same level of public outcry witnessed in Greece.


2009 Deficits


Italy

  • 46 billion euros (US$56)
  • 5.3% of GDP
  • Spending cuts = 24 billion euros over two years

Spain

  • 100 billion euros (US$122)
  • 11.4% of GDP
  • Spending cuts = 15 billion euros

US Jobless Claimants Fall to 460,000

The US Labor Department reported that the number of new jobless claimants fell last week to 460,000. Despite the decrease of about 14,000 from the previous week, this was still higher than expected and provides further evidence that improvements in the US employment market remain tentative at best.

Late last year, the official unemployment tally was 10.1 percent. It fell to 9.7 percent in the first quarter of 2010, but has since crept upwards to 9.9 percent as of April.

Source: Associated Press

Rising Auto Sales Helps Lift Japanese Exports by 40%

The total value of Japan’s exports for the month of April climbed just over 40 percent to 5.9 trillion yen (US$65 billion). This is the fifth straight month that exports have increased.

Sales to the European Union were up 19.8 percent year-over-year and while this is down from the 26.7 percent increase in March, analysts still feel that exports will remain positive and help get the nation’s economy back on track.

“Exports remain very firm even after very strong growth in January to March,” said Azusa Kato, an economist at BNP Paribas in Tokyo. “The pace of export growth will slow in April to June, but we expect exports to continue to expand.”

Source: BBC News

May 12, 2010

Portugal Sells Maximum 1 Billion Euros of Bonds as Demand Rises

Portugal sold 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion) of 10-year bonds, getting more demand than at previous auctions, as it benefited from the European Union’s unprecedented aid plan for the region’s most indebted countries.

The Lisbon-based Treasury issued the 4.8 percent bonds due 2020 to yield 4.52 percent, 181 basis points below the record reached last week at the height of the crisis, the nation’s debt agency said today. Investors bid for 1.8 times the amount on offer, up from 1.6 times at the previous two auctions. Portugal aimed to raise 300 million euros to 1 billion euros at the sale.

Bloomberg

May 7, 2010

German Lawmakers Vote to Approve Greek Bail-Out

Despite being immensely unpopular with citizens and politicians alike, Germany’s Lower House of Parliament voted in favor of contributing an expected 22.4 billion euros ($28.6 billion) to the Greek rescue package. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right governing coalition was joined by one of the three opposition parties in approving the aid. The Upper House of Parliament — representing Germany’s 16 states — later added its approval.

Source: Associated Press

March 25, 2010

Goldman Says IMF, Greece May Negotiate EU20 Billion Aid Program

The International Monetary Fund may ultimately hand Greece an aid program worth about 20 billion euros ($27 billion) over 18 months, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The cash-strapped nation may ask the Washington-based lender for support within weeks and “very likely” in a few months as it struggles to cut the biggest budget deficit in the European Union, Goldman Sachs’s Chief European Economist Erik Nielsen said in an e-mailed note to clients today. European leaders start talks in Brussels today.
Bloomberg

January 27, 2010

Greece may be turning to China for help

The Financial Times and the Wall Street Journal reported that Greece was turning to China to buy up to 25 billion euros of its bonds to help it through its fiscal crisis, with U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs promoting the deal to Beijing.

CNBC

Greece Denies Reports of Bond Deal with China

Greece on Wednesday denied press reports it had mandated Goldman Sachs to sell bonds to China, but its debt chief reiterated a roadshow in Asia was in the pipeline.

The Financial Times and the Wall Street Journal reported that Greece was turning to China to buy up to 25 billion euros of its bonds to help it through its fiscal crisis, with U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs promoting the deal to Beijing.

“The Finance Ministry categorically denies that there is any deal to sell Greek bonds to China,” the statement said. “The Finance Ministry has not mandated Goldman Sachs to negotiate any deal with China.”

“The figures reported are not true,” the finance ministry said in a statement to Reuters.

CNBC

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