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Operation Twist part 2: New York Fed purchases $4.754 billion in Treasury coupons.
Apr 4th, 2012 13:50 by News
Stock Plunge Is ‘Much Ado About Nothing’: Bill Gross
Apr 4th, 2012 13:47 by News

The stock market is overreacting to what the Federal Reserve didn’t say about quantitative easing in the minutes from its March meeting, bond king Bill Gross told CNBC Wednesday.

“It’s much ado about nothing or much ado about a little,” the founder of Pimco said. “We should think of the Fed as like a chess game where some of the pieces are more important than others,” likening Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to the king, San Francisco Fed governor Janet Yellen to the queen and New York Fed chief William Dudley to the castle, with the rest of the governors the knights.

…The Fed and other central banks have “got to keep going [with some form of stimulus] if they expect equity markets to continue…at this level,” he said.

[source]

Geithner: Deficit fear can’t crimp needed spending
Apr 4th, 2012 10:53 by News

04-Apr (Chicago Tribune) — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in Chicago Wednesday that improvement in the economy is “promising” after strong gains in investment and exports, but emphasized that a wrong move in deficit cutting could undermine the recovery.

…Meanwhile, Geithner noted repeatedly that unemployment remains high and that too many Americans are still facing difficulty, though they have made progress in paying down debt.

“Household debt is down 17 percentage points relative to income since before the crisis,” he said. Yet, he urged political leaders to be cautious about moving too quickly with extreme deficit reduction because the lesson of past financial crises has been that cuts too early bring about new recessions.

[source]

PG View: Certainly the fact that you have no money shouldn’t deter spending. And who gets to decide what constitutes “needed” spending?

Operation Twist: New York Fed purchases $1.866 billion in Treasury coupons.
Apr 4th, 2012 09:56 by News
Draghi: Talk Of ECB’s Exit Strategy ‘Premature’
Apr 4th, 2012 08:54 by News

04-Mar (MNI) — European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said Wednesday it was too soon to talk about an exit strategy from the ECB’s extraordinary liquidity measures.

“Any exit strategy talk for the time being is premature,” Draghi told a press conference following bank’s decision to leave its key interest rates unchanged. He said “there wasn’t any discussion on interest rate changes.”

Draghi said the central bank was not confronted with any immediate inflationary pressures and inflation expectations were “anchored over the medium term,” although he did note price pressures from commodities and indirect tax hikes.

[source]

Europe shares fall as data fuels recession fears
Apr 4th, 2012 08:35 by News

04-Apr (Reuters) — Europe’s top shares fell on Wednesday as economic data out of Europe fuelled recession fears and flagging demand for Spanish government bonds gave bearish investors the incentive to bank recent profits.

Having gained 1.9 percent on Monday, its biggest one-day rise in three weeks after strong manufacturing data out of the U.S. and China eased fears over slowing global growth, the FTSEurofirst has fallen more than 2 percent over the past two days.

It was down 9.78 points or 0.9 percent at 1063.09 at 1033 GMT.

The catalyst for the falls has been a slide in banks , which have retreated after a strong start to the year – down 10 percent from their mid-March highs as concerns have grown over Spain’s ability to deal with its bulging debts.

[source]

Morning Snapshot
Apr 4th, 2012 08:09 by News


04-Apr (USAGOLD) — Gold has extended to new 12-week lows, weighed by dissipated hopes for QE3 here in the States and a sudden re-escalation of the eurozone debt crisis, which has boosted the dollar. The yellow metal is once again back in the lower third of the 1920.50/1522.40 range.

Yesterday’s release of the minuted from the 13-Mar FOMC meeting has swung the QE3 pendulum back in favor of the doubters. Yet at least “a couple of members” echoed the recent sentiments of Fed chairman Bernanke, that the use of further quantitative measures remains ‘on the table’ and ‘data dependent’. Apparently, the market was looking for a more overt signal. While the retreat in gold is probably not so troubling to the Fed, the resulting plunge in the stock market after the minutes were released — and the downside follow-through in shares today — is certainly a concern. We can probably expect some indication in the Fed in fairly short order — particularly if stocks remain under pressure — that QE3 plans have not been permanently shelved.

Pimco’s Bill Gross tweeted this today: Central banks are where bad bonds go to die. Without QE, the financial markets & then the economy will falter.

Additional bleak economic data out of Europe — particularly the deterioration in the German manufacturing sector — and a bad Spanish auction clearly suggests that Europe is anything but ‘out of the woods”. While the second Greek bailout deal succeeded in pushing Europe from the financial headlines for a time, euro-concerns are back with a vengeance. The euro has tumbled to 3-week lows, prompting a firmer dollar, which in turn added additional impetus to the decline in gold.

The ECB held steady on rates, in-line with expectations, but it seemed like Mario Draghi spent an inordinate amount of time at the presser discussing inflation. With the data amplifying recession fears, perhaps Draghi’s inflation-centric rhetoric was merely a bone thrown to the Germans. His biggest concern should be growth risks right now, but it’s worth considering that the ECB is really simultaneously concerned about both price and growth risks…stagflation.

Bill Gross’ tweet today is reflective of the reality that additional Fed measures has been and will remain data dependent. If Europe slides back into recession and/or additional bailouts are needed, certainly it will have a negative impact on the US economy. I believe the discounting of QE3 is misplaced…as it the discounting of gold.

• US ISM non-manufacturing index fell to 56.0 in Mar, below market expectations of 56.8, vs 57.3 in Feb.
• US ADP employment survey +209k in Mar, above expectations of 205k, vs 230k in Feb.
• ECB left refi rate unchanged at 1.0%, in-line with expectations.
• Markit PMI – Services for Mar: Italy 44.3, France 50.1, both in-line with expectations.
• Germany Markit PMI – Services improves to 52.1 in Mar, above expectations of 51.8, vs 51.8 in Feb.
• Eurozone Markit PMI – Composite 49.1 in Mar, above expectations of 48.7, vs 48.7 in Feb; Services 49.2.
• UK CIPS Services PMI 55.3 in Mar, well above expectations of 53.6, vs 53.8 in Feb.
• Eurozone retail sales -0.1% m/m in Feb on expectations of unch, vs positive revised 1.1% in Jan; -2.1% y/y, vs negative revised -1.1% in Jan.
• Germany manufacturing orders +0.3% m/m in Feb, well below expectations of +1.1%, vs positive revised -1.8% in Jan; -6.1% y/y, vs negative revised -6.0% in Jan.
• Australia Balance on Goods and Services -A$0.48 bln in Feb, vs negative revised -A$0.97 bln in Jan.
• Philippines FX Reserves (USD) $76.6 bln in Mar, down from $77.8 bln in Feb.

Spanish bonds hit by poor auction
Apr 4th, 2012 07:37 by News

04-Apr (USAGOLD) — Spanish borrowing costs rose sharply on Wednesday after a disappointing auction of the country’s debt failed to reassure investors already nervous about plans for the deepest budget cuts in the post-Franco era.

At the first government bond auction since the budget, Spain sold €2.6bn of debt, at the lower end of a targeted range.

The sale followed a series of measures to slash the country’s deficit by €27.3bn this year, through a mix of raising the corporate tax rate, a public sector wage freeze and lopping 16.9 per cent off government spending.

[source]

ECB left refi rate unchanged at 1.0%, in-line with expectations. Draghi presser underway.
Apr 4th, 2012 06:38 by News
Gold lower at 1620.72 (-26.18). Silver 31.76 (-0.872). Dollar higher. Euro slumps. Stocks called lower. Treasurys mostly higher.
Apr 4th, 2012 06:33 by News
IMF chief calls on US for more cash
Apr 3rd, 2012 13:31 by News

03-Apr (Times of India) — IMF managing director Christine Lagarde implored the United States to help back-stop debt-ridden European countries Tuesday, wading neck-deep into bubbling US political waters.

Speaking in the US capital, Lagarde said the 187-nation International Monetary Fund needed more firepower to tackle financial crises raging around the globe, arguing it was in the US interest to pitch in and help Europe.

[source]

FOMC Minutes: No QE3 Anytime Soon, Stocks Drop
Apr 3rd, 2012 12:29 by News

03-Apr (The Wall Street Journal) — Stocks are dropping immediately after the release of the Fed minutes. No immediate signals of additional quantitative easing appear to be the catalayst from the latest downdraft.

The Dow dropped 111 points, or 0.8%, to 13153. The S&P 500 fell 11 points, or 0.8%, to 1408 and the Nasdaq Comp declined 13 points, or 0.4%, to 3108.

The Fed minutes didn’t yield any grand surprises. Fed officials believe the economic recovery has strengthened, but the big worry is the labor market and whether the pace of job growth can continue increasing.

[source]

Dollar jumps as gold and stocks tumbles back into their ranges as minutes suggest FOMC sees no need for further easing…unless growth slows.
Apr 3rd, 2012 12:25 by News

Minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee meeting from March 13, 2012

As usual, the key passage is: A couple of members indicated that the initiation of additional stimulus could become necessary if the economy lost momentum or if inflation seemed likely to remain below its mandate-consistent rate of 2 percent over the medium run.

In other words — and as chairman Bernanke has been saying all-along — the likelihood of further quantitative measures by the Fed remains ‘data dependent’.

Fed Will Offer QE3 or Extend Twist by June: Hatzius
Apr 3rd, 2012 11:57 by News

03-Apr (CNBC) — Whether it’s another round of quantitative easing or an extension of Operation Twist, “we’re going to see something by June” out of the Federal Reserve, Goldman Sachs chief economist Jan Hatzius told CNBC.

“After June, the probability goes down,” he said Tuesday, when the Fed is scheduled to release the minutes from its last meeting later in the day.

“June is the time Operation Twist ends. That’s a natural time to decide if they want to have a successor program,” he added. “We will see something in the second quarter by the June meeting.”

Operation Twist, under which the Fed extended the average maturity of its portfolio of Treasurys to keep interest rates low, is expected to end June 30.

The Fed “would like to see the economy grow more strongly” and has been encouraged by gains in the labor market. But if the U.S. gross domestic product does not pick up or the economy slows, another round of easing could be in the offing.

[source]

Morning Snapshot
Apr 3rd, 2012 10:30 by News

03-Apr (USAGOLD) — Gold is consolidating within yesterday’s range, amid conflicting reports about the end of the Indian gold strike. There have been some stories that suggest the strike ended Monday as a result of the Indian government deferring the hike in the excise duty on non-branded gold. Meanwhile, other stories dated from 02-Apr suggest the strike is ongoing and has turned violent in some instances.

With Indian demand accumulating ahead of the marriage season, we’ll be looking for this story to clarify in the coming days. This pent-up demand could result in higher prices for the yellow metal once it has been released.

In Europe, peripheral spreads are widening once again as concerns about Portugal’s solvency have resurfaced. In addition, the number of those in Spain registered for unemployment benefits rose for an eighth consecutive month in March, reaching a new all-time high. As of the end of 2011, the jobless rate in Spain is more than double that of the eurozone as a whole. The Spanish government projects the unemployment rate will hit 24.3% this year, but some analysts are already suggesting it could top 25%. According to Eurostat, nearly a third of all those unemployed in the eurozone live in Spain. Concerns that Italy may need help at some point as well, have sparked a rise in Italian yields too.

Nonetheless, the euro remains resilient in the face of these fresh worries. However, the corresponding softness in the dollar isn’t doing much to bolster the yellow metal at this point.

• US factory orders +1.3% in Feb, below expectations of +1.5% ,vs negative revised -1.1% in Jan.
• Spain unemployment change +38.8k in Mar, vs +112.3k in Feb.
• UK CIPS Construction PMI rose to 56.7 in Mar, above expectations of 53.2, vs 54.3 in Feb.
• Eurozone PPI +0.6% m/m in Feb, above expectations of +0.5%, vs upward revised +0.8% in Jan; +3.6% y/y, above expectations, vs upward revised 3.8% in Jan.
• Russia Q4 GDP 4.8% y/y, vs positive revised 5.0% y/y in Q3.
• Australia retail trade +0.2% in Feb, vs +0.3% in Jan.
• Thailand CPI hotter at +3.45% y/y in Mar, vs 3.35% y/y in Feb.
• RBA holds official cash rate steady at 4.25%, in-line with expectations.
• Singapore PMI eased in Mar to 50.2, vs 50.4 in Feb.

Spanish Bonds Fall on Budget Concern as Portuguese Debt Slides
Apr 3rd, 2012 09:31 by News

03-Apr (BusinessWeek) — Spanish 10-year bonds fell for the first time in three days after a report showed unemployment rose for an eighth month, adding to concern the nation may struggle to reduce its budget deficit.

Italian and Portuguese 10-year bonds also declined, while German bunds were little changed. Spanish two-year note yields rose as the nation said its debt to gross domestic product ratio will climb this year. The European Financial Stability Facility and Belgium auctioned bills today, while Spain prepared to offer as much as 3.5 billion euros ($4.7 billion) of debt due between January 2015 and October 2020 tomorrow.

[source]

Operation Twist: New York Fed purchases $1.347 billion in TIPS.
Apr 3rd, 2012 09:25 by News
US factory orders +1.3% in Feb, below expectations of +1.5% ,vs negative revised -1.1% in Jan.
Apr 3rd, 2012 08:45 by News
U.S. Economy Needs Stimulus, Not Soothsayers
Apr 3rd, 2012 07:11 by News

by Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers
02-Apr (Bloomberg) — Here’s something you don’t often hear an economist admit: We have very little idea where the economy will be next year.

Truth be told, our best guesses just aren’t very good. Government forecasts regularly go awry. Private-sector economists and cutting-edge macroeconomic models do even worse.

…By contrast, the longer-run consequences could be dreadful, if we find ourselves with 8.5 percent unemployment fully six years after the recession began. Europe’s experience in the 1970s and 1980s demonstrated that persistently high unemployment can become entrenched, leading to further unemployment in the future — a process economists call hysteresis. Skills atrophy, hope fades and people lose contact with the networks that can help them find work. If this occurs with the millions of U.S. workers who have been without jobs for more than a year, it will be costly and very difficult to undo.

In other words, the cost of too little growth far outweighs the cost of too much. If we readily bear the burden of carrying an umbrella when there’s a reasonable chance of getting wet, we should certainly be willing to stimulate the economy when there’s a reasonable risk that doing nothing could yield a jobless generation.

[source]

Gold lower at 1672.52 (-6.33). Silver 32.87 (-0.17). Dollar lower. Euro lower. Oil lower. Stocks called lower. Treasurys mostly higher.
Apr 3rd, 2012 06:31 by News

03-Apr (USAGOLD) — I can’t remember the last time pretty much everything was starting out in the red like this.

Just to add a bright note, I’ll tell you that platinum and palladium are up $3 and $4 respectively.

Jewellery strike ends as India defers excise duty on non-branded gold
Apr 2nd, 2012 15:23 by News

02-Apr (MINEWEB) — With the Indian government stating that it would delay the implementation of hiking the excise duty on non-branded gold jewellery, the bullion strike in India has been officially called off. Jewellers in Mumbai and several parts of the country were back to their stores Monday afternoon, expecting a revival in demand.

[source]

Why, when and how QE3 is coming
Apr 2nd, 2012 12:24 by News

02-Apr (Financial Post) — As long as growth in the U.S. economy continues to limp along, the Fed will remain in play and QE3 should become a reality at the central bank’s June 19–20 meeting, according to Tom Porcelli, chief U.S. economist at RBC Capital Markets.

This view is based on his expectation that first quarter GDP looks like it will come in close to 1%. Mr. Porcelli also noted that hiring remains anemic, global risks persist, and little is being done to stem the threat of a massive fiscal contraction by the end 2012.

…Mr. Porcelli thinks the Fed will buy mortgage-backed securities, but expects the purchases will be smaller than both QE1 and QE2.

[source]

Euro Was Flawed at Birth and Should Break Apart Now
Apr 2nd, 2012 11:58 by News

01-Apr (Bloomberg) — Since the launch of the euro in January 1999, Germany and the Netherlands have experienced a growth slowdown and loss of wealth for their citizens that would not have happened had they never joined the euro.

We know this to be true, because we can compare the progress of these two Northern European economies with that of Sweden and Switzerland, which kept their freely floating currencies in 1999 and continued to grow as before. Indeed, over the period of the euro’s existence, the German and Dutch economies have grown significantly more slowly than those of the U.S. and the U.K., despite the debt crisis now engulfing the “Anglo-Saxons.”

Sweden and Switzerland grew as fast or faster in 2001-11 as they did in 1991-2001. The German and Dutch economies, by contrast, not only slowed down in 2001-2011 (to 1.25 percent from 3 percent in the case of the Netherlands), they also suppressed wage growth to adjust for the effects of the euro.

[source]

PG View: It would seem the notion that Germany benefited dramatically from the euro over the past dozen years, and should therefore be supporting the profligate Mediterranean states, may in fact be misplaced.

Operation Twist: New York Fed purchases $4.549 billion in Treasury coupons.
Apr 2nd, 2012 11:28 by News
Morning Snapshot
Apr 2nd, 2012 11:25 by News


02-Apr (USAGOLD) — Gold is off to a good start for the week, spurred by heightened expectations of further Fed accommodations. The yellow metal surged about $20 from the overseas low and stocks jumped as well, when US construction spending for February came in at -1.1% on expectations of +0.7%. Adding insult to injury, the January data also saw a big negative revision from -0.1% to -0.8%.

The market seems to be getting in through their heads that the likelihood of a QE3 is very data dependent. Last week RBS bond strategist John Biggs told Bloomberg, “In the past week Bernanke’s gotten in front of every microphone he could find and gotten the market to realize that we shouldn’t have priced out QE3 and even if you don’t think it’s going to happen you have to attribute some sort of probability to it, and that he’s going to stay accommodative and potentially increase accommodation.” In a nutshell, that means crummy US data is going to counter-intuitively cause stocks to rise along with the prospects for additional Fed accommodations.

Data coming out of Europe is similarly concerning, further delineating the differences between the north and south. For example, the unemployment rate in the eurozone as a whole climbed to 10.8% in February; while the jobless rate in Germany is nearly half that at 5.7%. German manufacturing PMI came in at 48.8, and while still contractionary, it was better than expected. The Greek economy on the other hand is expected to slump an additional 5% this year.

We hear in the US are inclined to view our economy as a collective, even though some states are fairing far better than others. However within the EU, the entire weight of comparatively weak southern European nations, seems to be falling increasingly on the shoulders of the German taxpayers. Without some signal that this is going to be a short-term reality, there’s going to be increasing push-back from the Germans.

• US construction spending -1.1% in Feb, well below market expectations of +0.7% vs big negative revision from -0.1% to -0.8% in Jan.
• US manufacturing ISM rose to 53.4 in Mar, in-line with market expectations, vs 52.4 in Feb; prices ease to 61.0, vs 61.5 in Feb.
• Eurozone unemployment rate ticked higher to 10.8% in Feb, above market expectations of 10.7%, vs 10.7% in Jan.
• Switzerland retail sales (real) +0.8% y/y in Feb, well below market expectations of +1.5%, vs positive revised 4.7% y/y in Jan.
• Switzerland SVME Manufacturing PMI rose to 51.1 in Mar, above expectations of 49.6, vs 49.0 in Feb.
• France Markit PMI – Manufacturing slipped to 46.7 in Mar, below expectations of 47.6, vs 47.6 in Feb.
• Germany Markit PMI – Manufacturing rose to 48.4 in Mar, above expectations of 48.1, vs 48.1 in Feb.
• Eurozone Markit PMI – Manufacturing steady at 47.7 in Mar, in-line with expectations.
• UK CIPS manufacturing PMI rose to 52.1 in Mar, above expectations of 50.8, vs upward revised 51.5 in Feb.
• China PMI Manufacturing (CFLP) improved to 53.1 in Mar, vs 51.0 in Feb.
• China PMI Manufacturing (HSBC/Markit) deteriorates to 48.3 inMar, vs 49.6 in Feb.
• South Korea CPI moderates to 2.6% y/y in Mar, vs 3.1% y/y in Feb.
• Japan Tankan Index (Large Manufacturers) steady at -4 in Mar; Large Non-Manufacturers 5, vs 4 in Feb.
• Indonesia CPI rises to 3.97% y/y in Mar, vs 3.56% y/y in Feb.
• India Trade Balance-CC -$15.2 bln in Feb, vs -$14.8 bln in Jan.

US construction spending -1.1% in Feb, well below market expectations of +0.7% vs big negative revision from -0.1 to -0.8% in Jan.
Apr 2nd, 2012 08:27 by News
US manufacturing ISM rose to 53.4 in Mar, in-line with market expectations, vs 52.4 in Feb; prices ease to 61.0, vs 61.5 in Feb.
Apr 2nd, 2012 08:26 by News
Marc Faber Forecasts ‘Massive Wealth Destruction’
Apr 2nd, 2012 07:47 by News

Marc Faber the editor and publisher of the The Gloom, Boom and Doom Report warns that the crucial question over the next several years will not be ‘where will my returns be highest, but rather where will I lose the least’ as a result of bailouts and money printing. Faber worries that we will experience a “massive wealth destruction” as a result of very high inflation, social unrest, war, or a credit market collapse…”maybe all of it will happen, but at different times.”

Squawk Box guest Sallie Krawcheck pipes in, “Marc, isn’t the answer you hold more gold?”


Euro zone unemployment reaches near 15-year high
Apr 2nd, 2012 07:14 by News

02-Apr (Reuters) — Unemployment in the euro zone reached its highest level in almost 15 years in February, with more than 17 million people out of work, and economists said they expected job office queues to grow even longer later this year.

Joblessness in the 17-nation currency zone rose to 10.8 percent – in line with a Reuters poll of economists – and 0.1 points worse than in January, Eurostat said on Monday.

“We expect it to go higher, to reach 11 percent by the end of the year,” said Raphael Brun-Aguerre, an economist at JP Morgan in London. “You have public sector job cuts, income going down, weak consumption. The economic growth outlook is negative and is going to worsen unemployment.”

[source]

Europe: Still sickly
Apr 2nd, 2012 07:14 by News

31-Mar (The Economist) — WHEN the editors of the German tabloid Bild met Mario Draghi recently they gave him a Pic kelhaube—a spiked helmet—to remind the Italian that they had last year depicted him in Prussian garb as the most Germanic of candidates to run the European Central Bank. It may come in useful: hardliners are taking shots at Mr Draghi for spraying banks with €1 trillion ($1.3 trillion) of cheap money. This “powerful drug” may have side-effects, he says, but it works: “The worst is over” for the euro zone.

Don’t be so sure. The fever has been rising again in Spain after the government wildly overshot its deficit target last year. The Italian prime minister, Mario Monti, expressed alarm (which he later withdrew) that the Spanish illness might harm his own country’s convalescence. Portugal and Ireland are in recession, and may need second bail-outs; Greece will probably require a third rescue (and the restructuring of official debt).

[source]


Author key: MK - Michael J. Kosares; GC - George Cooper; PG - Peter A. Grant; JK - Jonathan Kosares; RS - Randal Strauss. [see also 12 yrs of Discussion Archives]


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