Today's Headlines
Bloomberg:
- German Exports Fell in February Amid Euro-Area Recession. German exports fell more than
economists forecast in February as the euro area, the country’s
biggest trading partner, struggled to emerge from recession. Exports, adjusted for working days and seasonal changes,
dropped 1.5 percent from January, when they gained 1.3 percent,
the Federal Statistics Office in Wiesbaden said today.
Economists forecast a 0.3 percent decline, according to the
median of 15 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Imports fell
3.8 percent. Shipments from Germany to the euro area dropped 4.1 percent
in February from a year ago, while those to the European Union
decreased 3.4 percent. Exports to non-EU members fell 1.9
percent, today’s report showed.
- European Stocks Are Little Changed; Lagardere Falls. European (SXXP) stocks climbed as mining shares rallied and Alcoa Inc. began the U.S. earnings season
with profit that beat analysts’ estimates.
- Fitch Cuts China Yuan Debt Rating on Local Government Borrowing. Fitch
Ratings Ltd. cut China’s long- term local-currency debt rating, citing
increasing risks to the country’s financial stability given the lack of
transparency in
the increased borrowing of local governments. Fitch lowered the rating to “A+”, its fifth-highest
level, from “AA-,” the London-based company said in an e-
mailed statement today. The company estimates total credit in
China’s economy, including various forms of so-called shadow
banking, may have reached 198 percent of gross domestic product
at the end of 2012, up from 125 percent at end-2008. “Fitch believes Chinese LGs likely have significant
additional contingent liabilities arising from debts of LG-
linked corporates,” the company said, referring to local
governments in China. “The classification of lending between
corporate and LG sectors have been opaque. Lack of transparency
over the indebtedness of LGs is a shortcoming for China relative
to peers.”
- China Surging Wages Threaten Economy’s Competitiveness, ADB Says. China’s
surging wages and other
costs are showing signs of undermining the competitiveness of
the nation’s economy, threatening its growth potential, the Asian
Development Bank said. Average inflation-adjusted wages have more than
tripled in a decade and non-wage costs for procedures such as hiring and
firing have risen since the introduction of a 2008 labor law, the
ADB said in a report published today. The labor market is being squeezed
across the nation as the pool of working-age people shrank last year.
At stake is China’s position as the world’s biggest producer of low-cost
goods, while competitors from Vietnam to Mexico stand to gain as
investors seek to relocate to countries that have cheaper labor or are
closer to big markets in the U.S. and Europe. “Rapid aging of the
population is taking its toll on the labor market,” Hamid L. Sharif, the
ADB’s country director for China, said at a press briefing in Beijing.
“Unless compensated
by rising labor productivity, high wages would erode the
economy’s competitiveness and growth potential, hampering
government development plans.”
- N. Korea Threats Boost Odds of First BOK Rate Cut Since October. North
Korea’s threats are raising the odds of the first interest-rate cut by
its southern neighbor since October as they threaten to damp business
and consumer sentiment in Asia’s fourth-largest economy.
- Egypt Pope Criticizes Mursi Over Sectarian Clashes Response. Egypt’s Coptic pope criticized the
Islamist president’s handling of the worst sectarian clashes in
months, and demanded stronger action against violence that has
deepened the nation’s rifts. Days of Muslim-Christian fighting outside a Coptic
cathedral in Cairo and in a nearby town have left at least eight
dead, most of them Christians. President Mohamed Mursi demanded
an investigation into the violence, vowed the perpetrators would
be brought to justice and ordered the revival of a little-known
body charged with tackling discrimination.
- Corn Boom Goes Bust With U.S. Sales in Record Drop: Commodities. The
record collapse in U.S. corn
exports and shrinking domestic demand are leaving more grain in
silos, spurring a bear market just eight months after drought
drove prices to an all-time high. Stockpiles will be 836 million bushels
(21.2 million metric tons) on Aug. 31, or 32 percent more than the U.S.
Department of Agriculture forecast last month, according to the
average of 35 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Export sales from
the world’s largest grower and shipper fell 54 percent in the year that
began Sept. 1, heading for the biggest annual drop in
government data that starts in 1960.
- Gold, Silver Gain on Bets Central Banks Will Add More Stimulus. Gold rallied to a one-week high on
speculation that central bankers in the world’s major economies
will take additional steps to spur growth, boosting demand for
the precious metal as a store of value. Silver jumped.
- Lacker Says Government Should Be Ready to Let Big Banks Fail. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
President Jeffrey Lacker said plans to limit the size or change
the structure of the largest financial institutions must be made
with the intent of allowing a failure without government aid. “It makes perfect sense to constrain the scale and scope
of financial firms in a way that ensures that they can be
resolved in an orderly manner, without government protection for
creditors,” Lacker told a conference at the University of
Richmond.
Fox News:
- 14 injured in knife attack on Lone Star College campus, suspect arrested. Over 12 people were stabbed Tuesday on the campus of Lone Star
Community College campus in Cypress, Texas, after a male suspect
reportedly used a small knife, ran from building to building and
randomly attacked individuals along the way. Harris Country Sheriff Adrian Garcia says the suspect, described as a
young white male, has been taken into custody. No further information
about the suspect or about the weapon has been released as the
investigation is still active and ongoing.
CNBC:
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
New York Times:
- Prosecutors Said to Be Investigating Tips at KPMG Involving Herbalife(HLF) and Skechers(SKX).
Federal prosecutors and securities regulators in Los Angeles are
investigating a former senior partner at KPMG for leaking secret
information to a stock trader, according to people with direct knowledge
of the inquiry. The case involves alleged tips about confidential data
related to Herbalife, the nutritional-supplement seller, and Skechers
USA, the footwear maker, according to these people. On Tuesday morning,
both Herbalife and Skechers announced that KPMG had resigned as their
auditor.
Reuters:
- ECB's Asmussen sees growing risks for H2 recovery. European
Central Bank Executive Board member Joerg Asmussen said on Tuesday
there were more downside risks to a recovery of the euro zone economy in
the second half of the year than one or two months ago. His comments
further fuelled expectations that the ECB is getting ready to cut
interest rates further, following last
week's comments by ECB President Mario Draghi that the bank
would "monitor very closely" all data and stands "ready to act". "There are more downside risks to a recovery in the second
half of the year than four or eight weeks ago," Asmussen said in
a speech in Nuertingen.
Telegraph:
Yonhap News:
- North Korea completed preparation for mid-range missile launch,
citing South Korean govt officials. North Korea is technically able to
launch missile as early as tomorrow.
1 comment:
I'm afraid the Slovenia is next after Cyprus. This economic crisis will never end and will continue to spread in European region.
bank bailouts
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