SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ChanceIs who wrote (57909)7/17/2006 8:47:43 PM
From: Jim McMannisRespond to of 306849
 
RE:"Bernanke is going higher"

That was easy. No deflation yet.



To: ChanceIs who wrote (57909)7/18/2006 2:52:54 AM
From: John VosillaRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 306849
 
Industrial production, capital investment, expanding the energy grid and alternative fuel sources are where the growth and the real need is going forward. Kill the stupid housing bubble by eliminating toxic loans instead of inverting the yield curve much farther. The speculation, overvaluation and overbuilding is a house of cards ready to collapse anyway. No need to take the entire economy down with it..



To: ChanceIs who wrote (57909)7/18/2006 7:46:11 AM
From: ChanceIsRespond to of 306849
 
DATA SNAP:UK June Annual CPI At All-Time High Of 2.5% -2

>>>I don't think that UK/Euro rates will be going down on this news. If the Euro rates rise, and invetors can get more interest there, as the dollar falls, well...... Let me put it this way. This won't help the US long bond, and when the yield curve inverts more than it already has, well......<<<

DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
July 18, 2006 4:53 a.m.


CPI records began in January 1997.

In May, CPI increased 0.5% on a monthly basis and 2.2% annually.

The acceleration in inflation was mainly due to higher domestic electricity and gas prices, which NS said are likely to continue to increase during the next two months.

Core June CPI inflation was 0.2% on the month and 1.2% annually.

The measurement of core inflation excludes the impact of alcohol, tobacco, food and petrol prices and is seen by many economists as being the true indication of inflation.

According to a Dow Jones Newswires survey, economists were expecting CPI to remain flat on the month and to rise 2.2% annually.

The retail price index rose 0.4% on the month and 3.3% on an annual basis, versus increases of 0.6% on the month and 3.0% on the year in May. It was forecast to rise 0.1% in monthly terms and 2.9% on the year.

The annual increase in RPI was the highest since December 2004 when rose 3.5%.



NS said several categories pushed up CPI headline inflation, but the largest was the increase in household electricity and gas bills.

These rose 9.8% on the year in June, up from a 9.0% increase in May. This was another record-breaking increase, NS said.

Electricity and gas each added 0.04% to the overall CPI index, NS said.

The statistics agency expects continuing upward effects from electricity and gas bills due to tariff increases, which are implemented over a four-month period. It expects tariff increases will continue to be felt in July and August, meaning inflation is expected to accelerate.

In its last quarterly inflation report in May, the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee had predicted CPI would be pushed up by domestic energy bills in the short term. Despite the high annual level reached this month, the committee is unlikely to be unduly concerned about the rise in household energy prices.

Were high inflation to continue beyond the summer months, then the chances of an interest rate rise later in the year to try and bring it back towards target would increase substantially.

The other upward effects to CPI came from the rising price of vegetables such as mushrooms, new potatoes, tomatoes and cauliflower, the price of cigarettes and the price of furniture.

Service sector CPI inflation was 3.4% on an annual basis from 3.3% last month, while goods inflation was 1.7% compared to 1.3% in May, another all-time high.

Gasoline prices fell during the June, making a downward contribution of 0.03% to the overall CPI level.



Change On Month Change On Year
June May June May
CPI +0.3% +0.5% 2.5% +2.2%

Food and Beverages +0.7% +1.5% +1.8% +1.1%
Alcohol and Tobacco +1.1% +0.1% +3.3% +2.2%
Clothing and Footwear -0.5% +0.8% -3.9% -3.7%
Housing and Utilities +0.8% +1.5% +9.8% +9.0%
Furniture and Household
Equipment +0.9% +0.8% -0.1% -0.8%
Health -0.1% +0.4% +2.7% +2.9%
Transport 0.0% +0.5% +3.9% +4.0%
Communication +0.3% -1.1% -0.3% -0.4%
Recreation and Culture -0.2% -0.2% -1.6% -1.6%
Education 0.0% 0.0% +4.7% +4.7%
Restaurants and Hotels +0.1% +0.5% +3.2% +3.2%
Miscellaneous +0.5% +0.2% +4.4% +4.1%
All Goods +0.4% +0.9% +1.7% +1.3%
All Services +0.2% +0.1% +3.4% +3.3%

CPI Excluding Energy,
Food, alcoholic
Beverages & tobacco +0.2% +0.1% +1.2% +1.1%
NS Web site: statistics.gov.uk




To: ChanceIs who wrote (57909)7/18/2006 8:19:09 AM
From: ChanceIsRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
China's Economy Soars 11.3%;
More Fiscal Restraint Expected

>>>So Bernanke will be pausing in August, but will it be 2007, or 2008?<<<

By ANDREW BROWNE
July 18, 2006; Page A2

BEIJING -- China's economy is picking up more speed, expanding by 11.3% in the second quarter of this year from a year earlier despite Beijing's efforts to slow the pace.

The figure released Tuesday by the National Bureau of Statistics highlights the failure of measures by Beijing to rein in expansion and avoid overheating. It is likely to dismay Chinese leaders who began clamping down more seriously after data showed the economy expanded by 10.2% in the first quarter. The first-quarter number was later revised to 10.3%.

For the first half of the year, the economy expanded by 10.9%. The Chinese economy is increasing by the fastest pace in roughly a decade.

The fear is that an overheated economy is producing excessive investment that could lead to industrial overcapacity, falling profits and, eventually, a crash caused by mass bankruptcies.

Many Chinese and foreign economists expect authorities will be forced to raise bank-interest rates for a second time this year, and issue more aggressive instructions to banks to curb lending. Reducing lending is the best way to bring down investment in a bank-dominated economy.

In releasing the data, statistics bureau spokesman Zheng Jingping characterized growth as "fast and stable." Nevertheless, he said in a statement that investment in fixed assets was "excessive" and the supply of credit was "overscaled."

One of the root causes of expansion is excess money in the economy, partly the result of trade surpluses with the U.S. and other trading partners. As dollars flood into China as payment for exports, they are bought by the central bank in return for yuan, a process that keeps the value of the yuan stable. Some of the surplus of yuan ends up being lent out by banks, swelling investment that is running far too hot.

The figures showed that fixed-asset investment increased by 30% in the first half of this year on a national basis. Industrial output for the month of June was up 20%. Retail sales for the month expanded 14% from the same month a year earlier.

Authorities have been comforted by the fact that inflation is low. Tuesday's figure shows that it is creeping up, with the consumer-price index in June up 1.5% from a year earlier after rising 1.4% in May.

In the first half of this year, banks have dished out 87% of the whole year's loan target set by the central bank.

Yet few economists believe Beijing is prepared to tackle the problem of easy money by allowing the yuan to appreciate more steeply, a move that could help narrow the trade surplus by making China's exports more expensive in dollar terms and its imports cheaper.

Last month's trade surplus hit its highest level ever of $14.5 billion, helping to balloon the surplus for the first half to $61.45 billion, 54% bigger than the surplus for the same period a year earlier. After tripling to $102 billion for the whole of last year, the surplus this year is on track to reach $150 billion or more.

The increasing surplus risks a protectionist backlash in Washington, where the Bush administration is pressing China to allow its currency to appreciate faster.

Beijing is scrambling to cool overheated parts of the economy, including property markets in several large cities, without derailing rapid expansion needed to create jobs. In April, the central bank lifted benchmark one-year bank lending rates by 0.27 percentage points to 5.85% from 5.58%. This month it raised the reserve requirement ratio for commercial banks -- the amount of money banks must deposit with the central bank -- by half a percentage point to 8%. For every $100 dollars of deposits, banks must set aside $8 in reserves, meaning the money can't be lent out.

Some economists believe another lending-rate increase of a similar magnitude is imminent. They speculate that it may be accompanied by a simultaneous increase in bank-deposit rates. That is because banks make most of their money from the difference between the low interest rates that they pay depositors and the higher rates they charge borrowers, and widening that so-called spread by raising lending rates might encourage banks to lend more.

But authorities are in a bind. If they raise interest rates sharply enough to cause a significant drop in lending, they risk attracting new inflows of speculative money betting that eventually the yuan will have to appreciate. Those inflows will add to liquidity in the domestic economy, undermining the effectiveness of the rate increases.