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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TobagoJack who wrote (21177)8/14/2007 3:14:35 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217556
 
Correction: Bank of Japan sucks 1.6 trln yen excess liquidity,

Bank of Japan retrieves 1.6 trln yen from money market as rates drop - UPDATE
08.14.07, 3:10 AM ET

TOKYO (Thomson Financial) - The Bank of Japan on Tuesday withdrew funds it poured into the money market in the past two working days amid signs that the liquidity crunch may not be as bad as initially perceived and with calm slowly returning to global financial markets.

The central bank this morning announced it will drain 600 billion yen from the banking system by

selling treasury bills as the overnight call rate dropped to around 0.4 percent, below the BoJ's target of 0.5 percent, showing there is ample liquidity in the market.

But the call rate fell further to 0.1-0.2 percent, according to market sources, forcing the BoJ to drain another 1.0 trillion yen shortly after midday.

A BoJ official, who is in charge of money market operations, said that because the rates 'continued to trade at levels lower (than the target rate) and there is excess liquidity in the market, we drained funds.'

The additional sale of one trillion yen in bills 'somewhat eased markets' concerns about a credit

crunch,' said Yuzo Sakai, forex controller at Tokyo Forex & Ueda Harlow.

'While there are hopes of things returning to normal, concerns over the subprime issues in the US and Europe remain and nervous trading is expected to continue,' he said.

No liquidity crunch

The sharp drop in rates on Tuesday and the central bank's subsequent action suggest there is currently no problem raising funds in Japan.

'It is generally believed that Japanese financial institutions have only limited exposure to the subprime market, and the Bank of Japan apparently conducted the liquidity injection (on Friday and Monday) for the sake of a concerted action (with US and Europe),' said Masuhisa Kobayashi, chief strategist at Barclays Capital Securities.

The BoJ's action barely moved the equity market although there has been some semblance of

stability in Japanese stocks after recent steep declines.

At 0543 GMT, the benchmark Nikkei index was up 12.84 points, or 0.1 percent, at 16,812.89.

This was the first time in five days that the central bank retrieved funds from the short-term money market. This was also the first time since April 3 that the BoJ had taken back funds more than once in a single day and the biggest amount since Feb 21 when it drained 2.8 trillion yen from the market.

Between Friday and Monday, the BoJ had pumped 1.6 trillion yen into the money market as part of a concerted global action by central banks to ward off a credit crunch due to problems in US subprime mortgages.

Subprime mortgages are lent to borrowers with poor credit ratings.

On Monday, the Federal Reserve announced 2 billion US dollars in overnight repurchase agreements. The Fed pumped 38 billion dollars into the US banking system Friday, its biggest operation since shortly after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

The European Central Bank added another 65.3 billion dollars in money markets overnight after injecting more than 200 billion dollars last week.

Caution prevails

Analysts said while the BoJ's move to retrieve funds was reasonable given the steep decline in the overnight call rate, it does not mean that confidence has been restored.

'We should take it as part of the BoJ's day-to-day operations, rather than view it as a reflection of its confidence in the restoration of stability in financial markets,' said Katsuhide Inadome, senior strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities.

Goldman Sachs said Monday it is leading a group of investors including Maurice Greenberg and Eli Broad in injecting three billion dollars into a Goldman hedge fund that lost about 28 percent of its value last week.

But Japanese banks are believed to have relatively little risk of getting badly hit by defaults on subprime loans.

According to estimates made by UBS Securities last month, major Japanese banks have a total exposure to US subprime loans of about one trillion yen, with losses likely to reach slightly over 100 billion yen.

'Given the choppy movements of the yen and the Japanese stock market, it is premature to judge that everything is settling down to the point that it will allow the BoJ to consider whether or not it can deliver another rate hike next week,' Kobayashi of Barclays Capital said.

'Having said so, we think that there is a chance of a rate hike at next week's policy board meeting, but that depends on whether global financial markets, including stocks, bonds and the currency, will stabilize.'

Economists had earlier expected the central bank to hike rates at its next policy meeting on Aug 22-23 but realized that decision may be deferred amid the problem of tightening credit elsewhere in the world.

At 0.5 percent, Japan's interest rate is the lowest among industrialized countries.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (21177)8/14/2007 3:57:12 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217556
 
Brazil: Economic Boom - Political Gloom. This guy gives a foreigner's view on the country today:

Brazil: Economic Boom - Political Gloom.
Written by John Fitzpatrick
Sunday, 12 August 2007
I recently went into a big supermarket in a down-market shopping center in São Paulo on a Sunday afternoon to buy a laptop computer. The place was teeming. On one side, families were queuing up at the cash desks with trolleys filled with food and other items. The electronics section, where I bought my computer, was so busy that I had to wait 45 minutes to get a receipt as sales staff were literally queuing up to type in their orders in the sales system.

Looking around I saw that customers were buying large, expensive items like televisions and DVD players and smaller things like toasters and irons. Most were paying in installments, taking advantage (if that is the right word) of the credit, which is so widely available these days.

In fact, if you walk down some streets in São Paulo you will practically be assaulted by people offering credit on behalf of Brazilian and foreign banks. Indicators show that unemployment and interest rates are falling while real income is rising and people are benefiting. Car sales rose to record levels in June and July, for example.

ELMAT: All that helping Seeker prifit from ITU shares!

On the other hand, the country is stagnating politically and, once again, we are bogged down in corruption scandals which are holding back reforms that need to be made in other areas, such as improving the infrastructure and reforming the political system itself.

ELMAT: This is good! we used to say: Brazil grows when the government is sleeping. Now with the state role diminished, (we just need the reins fo the economy in competent hands) the state can be in shambles but the economy is growing.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is neither a hands-on leader nor a good administrator but we have known that for decades. He was elected to the House of Representatives in 1986 but could not be bothered with the ins and outs of parliamentary procedure and set his hopes on the presidential race in 1989.

At the same time, he is a ditherer and hates to be pushed into taking decisions. The result is that he is unable to react swiftly when a crisis arises and this delay means that the crisis often gets worse and is left unresolved. Sometimes it gets overtaken and overshadowed by another crisis.

At the moment we are facing two long-running crises: the situation of Brazil's airports and air control system and the ongoing refusal of the chairman of the Senate, Renan Calheiros, to stand down and face allegations of corruption.

The air traffic crisis has been marked by two crashes in less than a year in which over 300 people have died and the crisis in the Senate threatens the budget which must be approved by Congress by law. While the country was coping with these two crises at the beginning of August, Lula was far away on his one of the many foreign trips.

ELMAT: He got the same wrong idea Brazilians have: That it is the executive that runs the country!!!

This time he was on a tour of Central American and Caribbean nations which included Mexico, Honduras, Nicaragua, Jamaica and Panama. Just what he achieved is difficult to see since he signed no agreements of any value and made no political breakthroughs.

ELMAT: We need him as out lobbist to chnage the geography of trade and he's been doing a good job at it.

Obviously we could not expect much to come from the trips to the smaller countries but Mexico was different. Mexico and Brazil are the two largest economies in Latin America and there is room for an increase in bilateral trade even though they belong to different blocs.

Brazil is in the Mercosul, along with Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay while Mexico is in the North American Free Trade Association, along with the United States and Canada. Lula appealed to Mexico's shared Latin American heritage and called on it to move closer to the Mercosul and consider being an associate member but he must have known that this was impossible.

The idea that Mexico would give up unfettered access to the American and Canadian markets in exchange for membership of a feeble outfit like Mercosul is unthinkable. Despite this, Brazil enjoys a healthy trade surplus with Mexico and trade has doubled since the two countries reached a preferred tariff agreement in 2002.

Brazilian businessmen are confident that trade could double to US$ 10 billion. Brazil exports high added value products to Mexico, such as cars and electronic goods. Both countries also have powerful state-owned oil companies, Pemex and Petrobras, and there is room for cooperation in developing biotechnology.

ELMAT: The author also adopted the Brazilian way of trying to explaian all and everything in a single article!!

Mexican billionaire, Carlos Slim, has huge investments in Brazil, particularly in the telecommunications sector. Lula called on Mexican businessmen to take part in the Accelerated Growth Program (PAC) which aims to invigorate Brazil's creaking infrastructure. However, he came back with nothing concrete from his meeting with Mexico's President Felipe Calderon.

Still we should be grateful that Lula's hands-off style has not jeopardized domestic growth. The crisis, which has gripped markets across the globe as a result of the problems facing the US's sub-prime mortgages collapse, has had little of the effect on Brazil it would have had some years ago. The São Paulo stock market, the Bovespa, has been hit and shares have lost ground but that was inevitable.

Brazil's economic fundamentals are now much stronger than they were and Lula can take the credit not because he has been a driving force for economic reform but because he has left the monetary and budgetary policy in the hands of non-political experts at the Central Bank and the National Treasury.

These technocrats have managed to oversee a fall in inflation to around 3.5% which has taken Brazil closer to rates in developed countries. Foreign debt has also been drastically reduced and stood at just under US$ 50 billion in July 2007 compared with around US$ 190 billion when Lula assumed office in January 2002.

At the same time, interest rates have fallen and are converging to levels of other emerging markets. The nominal rate is 11.5% but when inflation is taken into consideration they are around 7%. This is certainly still high but compares with around 10% between 1999 and 2005. GDP is growing strongly and one big bank is projecting growth of 5.2% for this year, an idea which would have been unthinkable even a year ago.

The result of this growth is that the government is raking in huge amounts of money in tax from company earnings, income tax from the larger number of people in employment and taxes on consumption. Unfortunately, instead of learning the lessons and encouraging greater economic growth and taking this opportunity to cut government spending, the opposite is happening.

The finance minister, Guido Mantega, showed this when he told a meeting of businessmen in São Paulo that the taxes from company profits would be "returned to society". Not surprisingly, based on this government's record of maladministration, seen in the current air crisis and prospects of an energy blackout in the coming years, this comment was met with hollow laughter.

One businessman put it aptly when he said: "Society knows very well that the government does not return services which are in line with the higher taxes collected which have risen year after year."

In his view, the higher tax burden has led to worsening services to support the bloated state and maintain an outdated administrative machine. "If the minister had said the government would dismantle this machine and cut costs, he would have received applause," he added.

In the words of the great Buddy Holly: "That'll be the day!"



To: TobagoJack who wrote (21177)8/14/2007 5:54:25 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217556
 
Liquidity carnival propped oil sands. Liquidity squeeze strangles oil sands.

Message 23785471



To: TobagoJack who wrote (21177)8/14/2007 7:57:06 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217556
 
Chart of the day: Euro rise killing European competitiveness economies of Europe. Those countries -Spain is a case in point- facing collapse needed a boost.

Spain was going under TJ said.

Message 23772987

Thus weakening the Euro wasd the solution. sub-prime gave the impetus. Deutsche Bank Ackermann came to fore to tell IKB was dying and created the liquidity 'crisis'.

Message 23758518

Another bank that create a 'criis'. BNP. Both European banks. sub-prime on 350bn bank is chicken feed!

ALMIGHTY EURO


• What Is Happening: Spats over the euro's continuing surge suggest that some countries and industries handle a strong currency better than others.
• Reaction: France renews its quest to talk down the currency, riling the ECB.
• What's Next: An even stronger euro could broaden grousing and put national differences into sharper relief.

Sarkozy new persident needs a helping hand too!!

Many Southern European countries, by contrast, have stuck to goods such as textiles, and are losing market share to low-cost rivals in emerging markets.

Strong Euro Splits Europe
July 19th, 2007
online.wsj.com

Oh a lower Euro would be most welcome, wouldn;t it?

But wait a moment! this thing was supposed to start in the US, but started in Europe.

Why? Europe needed a mechnism to lower the Euro. The liquidity 'crisis' is this mechanism.

No worries! Real economy is going well.