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Strategies & Market Trends : Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: mishedlo who wrote (82155)7/27/2008 4:51:46 PM
From: valueminded  Respond to of 116555
 
Mish:

I think this ends badly - well for the taxpayers at least - who will be on the hook for whatever was accepted as collateral and did not pan out.

best

Chris



To: mishedlo who wrote (82155)7/27/2008 5:35:02 PM
From: roguedolphin  Respond to of 116555
 
As costs rise, inflation's next front is retailers

By ELLEN SIMON, AP Business Writer Sun Jul 27, 12:52 PM ET
news.yahoo.com

NEW YORK - Coming to a store near you: Even higher prices. Most inflation this year has come from food and fuel, as retailers resisted passing along to strapped consumers the higher prices manufacturers charged them, but coming increases from companies such as Johnson & Johnson and Hasbro Inc. may leave them with no choice.

"While these increases have not for the most part been passed on at the retail level, it is inevitable that they will be at some point," said Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. "Car dealers and other retailers cannot continue to absorb rising costs at the wholesale level and not pass some of these increases on to consumers."

Sherwin Williams Co. on July 17 announced its third price increase in eight months. The company has been having "difficult discussions" with retailers, Chris Connor, chairman and CEO, said on its quarterly conference call.

The price increases are "well supported with facts in terms of why the company needs them," he said. "Our customers, to the best of their ability, are passing them on."

Hasbro said the retailers it sells to didn't like price increases the company announced Monday "but they recognize that their own private-label costs are going up and they've accepted it."

The increases leave retailers in a bind: They can keep prices steady and cut profit margins or raise prices and risk losing sales.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. has been in the lead of aggressively keeping prices down, pressuring its competitors to do the same.

"We have seen inflation and we have passed some of that through," said John Simley, a Wal-Mart spokesman. "We have, wherever possible, worked with our suppliers to reduce the inflationary impact as much as possible."

Costco Wholesale Corp. said Wednesday its fourth-quarter earnings would be "well-below" Wall Street estimates of $1 a share as it delays price increases. Stock in rival BJ's Wholesale Club Inc. fell more than 10 percent as investors feared the competitor would have to match Costco's prices.

Some economists say that once Americans spend their $106.7 billion in tax rebate checks, consumer spending may shrivel, sparking a round of price cuts to entice shoppers. Others think price increases may be postponed, but they're on their way.

Much of this depends on how much money consumers have after buying gas and groceries — and what kind of mood they're in once they've filled their tanks. On Friday, The Reuters/University of Michigan index of consumer sentiment for July came in at 61.2, beating expectations and slightly better than the 28-year low of 56.4 hit in June. Still, the confidence index was at 90.4 a year ago.

Even Costco said it won't swallow price increases from suppliers on key items, but would postpone passing them along to consumers, if only for a few weeks, because it wants to be the last retailer to raise prices.

The company raised its prices for rotisserie chicken from $4.99 to $5.49 about three months ago. Last week, the prices rose to $5.99.

"I think the consumer is just starting to see, not only with us, rising commodity costs and rising general merchandise costs in a much bigger way then they've seen other than with gasoline itself," said Richard Galanti, Costco's chief financial officer, during a conference call Wednesday.

Inflation hit 5 percent for the year in June, the highest it's been since 1991, but the price increases hitting manufacturers have been far worse.

Prices manufacturers paid for crude materials rose 70 percent for the three months ended in June, but companies weren't able to pass all those increases along. Prices for the intermediate goods made from those materials rose much less, about 27 percent. The prices for finished products made from those goods rose 14 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Producer Price Index.

Kimberly-Clark Corp., which makes Kleenex, Huggies diapers and Viva paper towels, said Thursday that energy and commodity cost increases this year would total as much as $900 million, double its prediction at the beginning of the year.

Saying the company might raise prices for the second time this year, Chief Executive Thomas Falk added, "The reality is that the rapid run-up in commodity costs has outpaced our ability to offset inflation in the near-term with price increases and other actions."

The increases keep coming.

Dow Chemical Co., the second largest chemical company in the world after Germany's BASF, is raising some prices by as much as 25 percent this month, following June price increases that were as high as 20 percent on all products. The increase is sure to put more pressure on manufacturers, since Dow's chemicals are used in everything from packing peanuts to frozen-food trays to diapers.

_

Associated Press Business Writer Anne D'Innocenzio contributed to this report. Ellen Simon covers the economy. She can be reached at esimon(at)ap.org.


In this March 11, 2008 file photo, a shopper looks at her receipt as she pushes a cart through a Wal-Mart superstore in Turnersville, N.J. Most inflation this year has come from food and fuel, as retailers resisted passing along to strapped consumers the higher prices manufacturers charged them. Coming price increases from companies such as Johnson & Johnson and Hasbro Inc. may leave them with no choice. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, file)



To: mishedlo who wrote (82155)7/27/2008 6:01:50 PM
From: ggersh  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Isn't one of them guys a GS banker...That would explain everything...



To: mishedlo who wrote (82155)7/27/2008 6:50:26 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Attack Iran see oil surge to $500?

Iran says oil price could reach $500
Published: Sunday, 27 July, 2008, 01:33 AM Doha Time
TEHRAN: Iran’s Opec governor said world oil prices could reach as high as $500 per barrel in a few years’ time if the US dollar falls further and political tension worsens, an Iranian weekly said.
“If the dollar’s value continues to decrease and if the political crisis becomes worse, the oil price would reach up to $500,” Mohamed Ali Khatibi told Shahrvand-e Emrooz in an interview published yesterday.
He was asked about predictions that oil prices could reach up to $200 per barrel in the next two or three years.
Oil dropped $2 to a fresh seven-week low on Friday, extending a decline that has knocked more than $24 off crude in two weeks as high fuel prices continue to batter demand.
Crude prices reached an all-time peak of $147 earlier this month.
Khatibi also said oil exports from the whole Middle East region would be at risk if the Islamic state came under any military attack over its disputed nuclear programme.
“If there is another war in the region, it will not only be Iran’s oil not reaching the market, but rather the oil of the whole region would be cut from the market,” Khatibi said. “In that case, we will not have a price rise. We will have a price explosion.”
Around 40% of global oil shipments leave the Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz off Iran’s southern coast and Tehran has threatened to impose controls on shipping there if it is attacked, and warned Gulf neighbours of reprisals if they took part.
Meanwhile, OPEC President Chakib Khelil said yesterday that easing of tension over Iran rather than a change in supply and demand was the main factor pushing oil prices lower.
Khelil added that world petroleum demand was holding up and the market might remain volatile. He said a recent strengthening of the dollar had also helped pushed prices lower.
“I think the market had to factor in that there that would not be an attack on Iran,” Khelil said, referring to tensions between the United States and Iran over Tehran’s nuclear programme.
“I don’t see a fall in demand, I don’t see destruction of demand. Supply is the same, or has increased.” – Reuters



To: mishedlo who wrote (82155)7/27/2008 7:54:50 PM
From: axial  Respond to of 116555
 
“No Atheists in Foxholes.” — No Libertarians in Financial Crises.

"So what’s my point? Not to argue that governments should intervene always (nor that they should intervene never). The lesson for government officials is that wherever they choose to draw the bailout line – one hopes the line strikes an intelligent balance between the short-run advantages of ameliorating a serious financial crisis and the longer-run disadvantages of moral hazard — they should think through the system ahead of time. They should take the appropriate regulatory precautions during the boom times, which correspond to the bailouts that will inevitably come during the busts."

More: content.ksg.harvard.edu

Jim