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.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: lorne who wrote (4307)12/15/1997 8:03:00 PM
From: PaulM  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116756
 
Southwestern Gold Corp. (TSE) announced after the close today that it will buy back 3.3% of its 15 mill outstanding shares. Another bottom signal?

Check Yahoo. Stilll too lazy to post URL's.



To: lorne who wrote (4307)12/15/1997 9:00:00 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116756
 
SOUTH KOREAN WON TO BE FLOATED
(16-Dec-1997)

A MAJOR SHIFT IN POLICY FOR SOUTH KOREA'S GOVERNMENT. SEOUL HAS DECIDED TO FLOAT THE SOUTH KOREAN WON STARTING TODAY. THE MINISTRY OF FINANCE SAYS IT'S GETTING RID OF THE 10 PERCENT DAILY TRADING BAND WHICH IT IMPOSED LAST MONTH. PRIOR TO THAT, THE WON TRADED WITHIN A 2 PERCENT BAND. THE MOVE COMES AFTER SHARP FALLS IN THE CURRENCY RECENTLY. JUST LAST WEEK, THE WON DROPPED MORE THAN 25 PERCENT AGAINST THE U-S DOLLAR. THAT MAKES IT A TOTAL OF 50 PERCENT SINCE THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR. THE WON IS NOT FULLY-CONVERTABLE AND ONLY HAS TRADE-RELATED FOREIGN EXCHANGE DEALINGS PERMITTED. SOUTH KOREAN OFFICIALS SAY THEY'RE FLOATING THE WON AT THE REQUEST OF THE I-M-F. AND SOME ANALYSTS ARE GIVING THE MOVE A THUMBS UP, SAYING IT'LL HELP BRING SOME STABILITY TO SOUTH KOREA'S MARKETS.



To: lorne who wrote (4307)12/21/1997 8:57:00 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116756
 
IMF Reports U.S. Economy in Danger of Overheating
<Picture>9.01 a.m. ET (1401 GMT) December 21, 1997

<Picture: Photo>
Yun Jai-hyoung/APThe international community has put up more than $100 billion in emergency help for South Korea, Indonesia and Thailand, producing critics

WASHINGTON - The U.S. economy is growing at an unsustainable rate and Federal Reserve policy makers may be forced to raise interest rates in the near future to cool it off, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said Saturday.

In its interim World Economic Outlook, the fund said there was little reason to expect growth in the world's top economy, now in the seventh year of an unbroken expansion, to slow significantly despite a raging financial crisis in Asia.

Interest rates would have to be raised if growth did "not slow to a sustainable pace," the report said. The IMF expects the U.S. economy to expand by 2.4 percent next year after output grew an estimated 3.5 percent in 1997.

"If it were not for the weakness in Asia and its expected effect on the U.S. economy, (because) what has clearly been an unsustainable path over the past one and a half years, the Fed would have tightened in November and December," IMF chief economist Michael Mussa told a news conference to present the report. "That would have been reasonable and prudent."

The U.S. central bank has left interest rates unchanged since March, when it bumped up the key overnight Fed funds rate by a quarter-percentage point to 5.5 percent. It has since resisted from raising rates amid the expectation of a slowdown in growth and the apparent lack of strong inflation pressures.

For now, the IMF acknowledged that was the right policy, saying higher interest rates at this point risked unsettling already jittery global financial markets even more. The rate outlook for next year, however, depended on the extent to which the turmoil in Asia would affect the buoyant U.S. economy.

Already, the international community has put up more than $100 billion in emergency help for South Korea, Indonesia and Thailand, the hardest-hit of the former "Asian tigers".

Lower demand from Asia is expected to put a lid on U.S. exports while also keeping inflation in check as producers from the region slash prices of goods they sell to the United States in a bid to gain market share.

If the turmoil in the region worsened, the IMF said policy makers in North America and Europe may actually have to lower rates to prevent the situation from spiraling out of control.

"In such a scenario, there could be a need for timely monetary easing to arrest an escalating downturn," it said.

The report noted that the key risk for growth in the major developed nations, including the United States, was a worsening of financial problems besetting Japan, the world's number-two economy.

"The key near-term risk for the advanced economies involves a possible intensification of the slowdown in Japan," it said.

The IMF forecast U.S. unemployment, currently at a 24-year low of 4.6 percent, would grow to 5.2 percent next year from an estimated 5.0 percent for 1997. Consumer prices are expected to rise 2.6 percent in 1998 after 2.4 percent this year.

The fund added it expected the nation's current account deficit to rise to $230 billion next year from $178 billion this year as private investors, scared by the financial turmoil in Asia, invest more capital in the safety of U.S. markets.