Today's Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Greek Budget Predicts Economy Will Shrink for Sixth Year. Greece’s economy will contract for a
sixth year in 2013 as the government prepares further cuts to
pensions, wages and social benefits to meet the terms of its
bailout packages. Gross domestic product will shrink 3.8 percent next year
after contracting 6.5 percent in 2012, according to the 2013 draft budget, e-mailed by the Finance Ministry in Athens and submitted to parliament today. This compares with a prediction in Greece’s March rescue agreement with the European Union and
the International Monetary Fund that the economy would contract
4.8 percent this year before stabilizing in 2013.
- Analysts Cut Profit 52% as Europe Valuations Hit 2-Year High. Analysts are lowering estimates for
European earnings growth by 52 percent, clashing with investors
whose confidence in the European Central Bank helped send equity
valuations to a 2 1/2-year high.
- Global Factory Weakness Spreads as Debt Crisis Persists. Manufacturing
from Europe to China contracted in September as the euro region’s
fiscal crisis eroded investor confidence and clouded global growth
prospects. A gauge of manufacturing in the 17-nation euro region was
at 46.1, above an initial estimate of 46 on Sept. 20, Markit Economics
in London said today. A reading below 50 indicates contraction. A Chinese factory index was at 49.8 for September,
a statistics bureau report showed.
- U.S. Households Face Tax Increase From 2013 Fiscal Cliff.
U.S. households are facing an average tax increase of $3,446 in 2013 if
Congress doesn’t avert the so- called fiscal cliff, the nonpartisan Tax
Policy Center said in a study released today. The top 1 percent of
households face some of the largest tax increases in 2013 and would see
their after-tax incomes fall by 10.5 percent if Congress does nothing.
That would translate to an average tax increase of $120,537 for that
group. A typical middle-income household earning between about $40,000 and $60,000 would face a tax increase of about $2,000. “This is a very large tax increase,” Donald Marron, the center’s director, told reporters in Washington today. If
Congress does nothing, tax rates on income, capital gains, dividends
and estates would increase, and the alternative minimum tax would spread
to 21.7 million households, up from 4 million this year. The
top statutory tax rate on ordinary income would reach 39.6 percent, up
from 35 percent, and the top rate on capital gains would be 23.8
percent, up from 15 percent. A 2 percentage point payroll tax cut is set
to expire at the end of 2012.
- Jobs Outlook Seen Weak as U.S. Companies Reporting Cost Cuts. Weakening
demand is forcing new and accelerated cost reductions at companies from
Bank of America Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) to Staples Inc.
(SPLS) and Eastman Kodak Co. (EKDKQ), dimming the outlook for an already
struggling U.S. labor market. Sales for businesses in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 0.9 percent from a year earlier in July through
September, the second consecutive quarterly drop and biggest
decline since 2009, according to analyst forecasts compiled by
Bloomberg. A 1.2 percent gain projected for October-December
still is smaller than the 5.4 percent rise in this year’s first
three months.
- Manufacturing in U.S. Expands Unexpectedly as Orders Rise. The Institute for Supply Management’s factory index rose to 51.5 last month from 49.6 in August, the Tempe, Arizona-based
group said today. Readings above 50 show expansion, and the September
measure exceeded the most optimistic forecast in a Bloomberg survey.
- Bernanke Says Fed to Keep Rates Low Even as Growth Rises. “We expect that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy will
remain appropriate for a considerable time after the economy
strengthens,” Bernanke said today in a speech in Indianapolis. Policy
makers’ forecast to hold the main interest rate near zero until at least
mid-2015 “doesn’t mean that we expect the economy to be weak through”
that year.
- Google(GOOG) Passes Microsoft’s(MSFT) Market Value as PC Loses to Web. Google Inc. has surpassed Microsoft Corp. to become the world’s second-largest technology company as computing
over the Internet reduces demand for software installed on desktop
machines.
Wall St. Journal:
CNBC:
- Euro Zone Factory Data Flag ‘New Recession’. Euro zone manufacturing put in its worst performance in the three months
to September since the depths of the Great Recession, with factories
hit by falling demand despite cutting prices, a business survey showed
on Monday — pointing to a new recession. Factories helped lift the
17-nation bloc out of its last recession, but the survey suggests a
downturn that began in smaller periphery
countries has taken root in core members Germany and France. "Despite
seeing some easing in the rate of decline last month, manufacturers
across the euro area suffered the worst quarter for three years in the
three months to September," said Chris Williamson, chief economist at
data collator Markit. "The sector will act as a severe drag on economic
growth. It therefore seems inevitable that the region will have fallen
back into a new recession in the third quarter."
- 'Disappointing Earnings' Season Ahead: Pro.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
Telegraph:
- Spanish banks will need up to €105bn, warns Moody's. Fears for Spain escalated after rating agency Moody’s warned that the
country’s stricken banks may need almost twice as much capital as the
official estimate and Catalan’s separatists stepped up their rhetoric
against Madrid.
- G7: Europe will tell US to deal with 'fiscal cliff'. Europe will tell the US, Japan and Canada next week that it is acting to
resolve its sovereign debt crisis, but that US fiscal policy and slowing
growth in Japan and China also pose risks to the global economy, according
to reports.
El Mundo:
-
Spain
Considers Tax on Stock Market Trades, Energy. Spain's Budget Minister
Cristobal Montoro considers in 2013 introduction of tax on stock market
trades, new "green" taxes on energy and reform of corporate tax.
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