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Pastimes : The Justa and Lars Honors Bob Brinker Investment Club Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (361)7/19/2000 9:52:32 AM
From: rsie  Respond to of 10065
 
Justa, thanks for your take on bonds yesterday....sure helps wading thru the mirky world of bond prices/yields etc. seems the yield is going up.....10 year now 6.17 and rising....your continued comments are most helpful...Rich



To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (361)7/19/2000 10:34:08 AM
From: Wally Mastroly  Respond to of 10065
 
Trade deficits and the FED:

cbs.marketwatch.com



To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (361)7/19/2000 11:17:49 AM
From: Wally Mastroly  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 10065
 
Trade deficits and the FED - more mixed signals:

Trade gap grows to record $31 billion

By Rex Nutting, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 8:43 AM ET Jul 19, 2000
NewsWatch
Latest headlines

WASHINGTON (CBS.MW) - Trade with foreign countries dropped
slightly in May, but the gap between exports and imports widened to a
record $31 billion, the Commerce Department said Wednesday.

Imports of goods and services to meet still robust U.S. demand dipped 0.3
percent to $116.8 billion despite an increase in the volume of crude oil
shipped in.

Meanwhile, exports of U.S.-made goods and
services fell 1 percent to $85.7 billion.

The deficit was a bit stronger than the $30.3 billion
gap expected by economists surveyed by
CBS.MarketWatch.

The trade gap in April was revised to $30.5 billion
from $30.4 billion.

The Fed

The trade report presents mixed signals for the
Federal Reserve. Falling or flat imports over several
months would be seen as a confirmation of lower
domestic demand, a key goal of the Fed. Lower
exports also take pressure off U.S. producers to
increase output that could fuel inflation.

But in the long run, the large trade deficits run up in
the past two years could put pressure on the value of
the dollar. Attracting the foreign capital that finances the deficit could
require higher interest rates, just at a time when the Fed may feel interest
rates have gone up enough.

The strong dollar has been a major element in keeping domestic prices low
in the past few years.


Imports off 0.3%

The drop in imports in May was largely due to the 4.9 percent drop in auto
imports to $15.7 billion. Imports of capital goods used by businesses and
imports of consumer goods both rose slightly to new records. Imports of
industrial supplies rose on higher shipments of fuel oil and nuclear fuel
materials.

Imports of crude oil were unchanged at $7.04 billion. The average price fell
to $24.16 a barrel while the volume rose to 297 million barrels, the highest in
nearly two years. The $1.4 billion deficit with the oil cartel nations was the
second highest ever as were total imports of $5.4 billion.

Exports down 1%

The export picture was also muddled.

Exports of capital equipment fell 0.8 percent on decline sales of computer
accessories, testing instruments and electric apparatus. However, exports
of aircraft and parts rose 21 percent to $4.7 billion. Exports of
semiconductors rose 2.9 percent to $4.8 billion.

Exports of consumer goods slipped 0.2 percent as tobacco sales fell 21.4
percent. A drop in industrial supply exports offset a small gain in exports of
foods and feeds.

Countries and regions

Geographically, the trade gap worsened with every major region. The gap
with Canada and Mexico hit a record $6.4 billion. The gap with Western
Europe widened to $5.7 billion. The deficit with the Pacific Rim nations
grew to $17.4 billion, despite the shrinkage in the gap with Japan to $6.9
billion.

Imports from the four Asian tigers jumped 9.3 percent to a record $9 billion.
Imports from China increased 10.2 percent to $7.8 billion while exports of
$1.5 billion were the largest since October 1998.



To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (361)7/19/2000 4:14:29 PM
From: Wally Mastroly  Respond to of 10065
 
Options traders bullish now -Time plan defensive moves...

biz.yahoo.com