2:23 PM

(0) Comments

Lehman entitled to disputed collateral, judge says

Addison Ray

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin | Settlement Statement | WordPress Tutorials

9:53 AM

(0) Comments

Goldman may seek to counter Senate findings: report

Addison Ray

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin | Settlement Statement | WordPress Tutorials

6:52 AM

(0) Comments

S&P 500 seen testing April lows, Apple eyed

Addison Ray

NEW YORK | Mon Jun 6, 2011 7:48am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The S&P 500 looked set to retest its April lows on Monday after signs the economy was slowing pushed the index to its fifth week of losses, with many investors expecting the downtrend to continue.

The broad-based index has fallen 4.5 percent since a recent high at the start May and is trading at six-week lows after falling through technical support levels. Investors are eyeing the index's low for April.

"We are precariously close to testing the April low of 1,294.70, which if broken adds a danger factor of the market testing the March low of 1,249.05," said Andre Bakhos, director of market analytics at Lek Securities in New York.

A much weaker-than-expected jobs report on Friday was the latest disappointing economic news to hit sentiment.

S&P 500 futures fell 3.3 points and were below fair value, a formula that evaluates pricing by taking into account interest rates, dividends and time to expiration on the contract. Dow Jones industrial average futures lost 25 points, and Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 5.5 points.

In what could be a bright spot for investors, Apple Inc (AAPL.O) Chief Executive Steve Jobs, who has been on medical leave for months, takes to the stage in San Francisco Monday and could take the wraps off what investors hope will be the next source of growth for the company. The shares rose 0.5 percent to $345 in premarket trade.

World markets were weak Monday. The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top shares fell for a fourth straight session, down 0.5 percent. .EU

The Nikkei average .N225 fell 1.2 percent to an 11-week closing low as speculation that Tokyo Electric Power Co (9501.T) could go through a restructuring fanned bearish sentiment in the wake of soft U.S. data.

Brent crude fell 1.3 percent to $114.39 a barrel on concern about demand ahead of a key OPEC meeting later this week. Signs that high prices are destroying demand in the West are worrying a group of OPEC's core members.

Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou starts a campaign to secure a new international bailout by imposing a long period of austerity on a nation already seething over corruption and economic mismanagement.

Google Inc (GOOG.O) is a "political tool" vilifying the Chinese government, an official Beijing newspaper said, warning that the U.S. Internet search group's statements about hacking attacks traced to China could hurt its business.

Nobel Prize winner Peter Diamond said Sunday he planned to withdraw as a nominee for Federal Reserve governor after his nomination was repeatedly opposed by Republicans.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) could release documents to counter a Senate subcommittee report that claimed the bank misled clients about mortgage-linked securities, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing sources.

(Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin | Settlement Statement | WordPress Tutorials

3:51 AM

(0) Comments

Fed's Plosser: Volatility of inflation concerns troubling

Addison Ray

NEW YORK | Mon Jun 6, 2011 3:32am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The American public's swing from deflation to inflation worries in the past year is "troubling" as it suggests potential doubts about the Federal Reserve's ability to keep prices stable, a top Fed official said on Monday.

Confidence in the Fed is critical if the U.S. central bank is to exit from its easy money policy in a way that doesn't lead to higher inflation or hurt the recovery, Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Plosser told a conference in Helsinki.

"It is troubling that the public's inflation concerns can be so volatile," he told a conference hosted by the Global Interdependence Center and the Bank of Finland, according to remarks prepared for delivery.

"It suggests that there may be less confidence in the credibility of the Fed's commitment to price stability than we might desire," Plosser, a well-known inflation hawk, said.

Last summer, concerns the U.S. could face a sustained period of falling prices prompted the Fed to step in with a second round of so-called quantitative easing to further support the economy. That program, known as QE2, is scheduled to end this month.

Recently, rising food and energy prices have fueled concerns about inflation. The Fed believes commodity price rises will be temporary and won't have a lasting impact on inflation.

Plosser said these swings in the public debate shows the need for clear communication from the Fed. He repeated his long-standing call for an explicit inflation target and a systematic exit plan from the Fed's extraordinarily easy monetary policy.

"Given the extraordinary amount of liquidity present in the U.S. banking system, it is reasonable for the public to be concerned about the prospects for inflation down the road," said Plosser, who has a vote on Fed policy this year.

The Fed cut interest rates at record lows near zero since December 2008 and has kept them there since. It has also bought bonds to further support the economic recovery, more than tripling its balance sheet to around $2.7 trillion.

At its April meeting, the Fed signaled it was in no rush to tighten monetary policy. But minutes of that meeting showed policymakers discussed potential exit strategy options at length.

Plosser said as the Fed normalizes policy, it should return to an operating framework in which the benchmark federal funds rate is the primary instrument of monetary policy. In this framework, the Fed's balance sheet should shrink to "probably less than $1 trillion" so that the fed funds rate trades above the interest on excess reserves.

The interest on excess reserves is a new tool that Congress gave the Federal Reserve's Washington-based Board of Governors -- not the Fed's policy-setting committee -- during the financial crisis.

Plosser said he would find a "floor system" framework in which the interest on excess reserves rate is the de facto policy rate "troubling" as it puts no limit on the size of the balance sheet.

"If our operating framework divorces our balance-sheet decisions from monetary policy, it becomes a tempting instrument for future policymakers inside or outside the central bank to use it for non-monetary-policy purposes," Plosser said.

"This could jeopardize the independence of the central bank and, if abused, would be a source of many unforeseen problems."

(Reporting by Kristina Cooke; Editing by Marguerita Choy)



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin | Settlement Statement | WordPress Tutorials

1:02 AM

(0) Comments

Amid debt crisis and slowdown, euro may still rise

Addison Ray

SINGAPORE | Mon Jun 6, 2011 2:17am EDT

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The euro hit a one-month high on Monday, heading toward $1.50 ahead of a European Central Bank policy meeting later this week, an upward march that could bring commodity prices and emerging market currencies along with it.

The weakest U.S. jobs growth in eight months in May has knocked the dollar lower across the board and pushed down Japanese stocks to a two-month low, confirming for investors that the global business cycle has shifted to slower growth and a defensive stance in portfolios is desirable.

The falling dollar has in turn pushed up the euro, which despite no solution in sight for the euro zone's debt crisis may find some traction this week and support commodity prices.

Follow the U.S. jobs data, the two outstanding questions for investors are if the synchronized slowdown reflected in industrial indicators around the globe is a warning of something worse on the horizon and whether monetary policy can again come to the rescue of major economies.

For that reason, this week's meetings of the ECB, embroiled in questions about the need for more Greece aid, the Bank of England, the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Bank of Korea will be focal points for investors.

The euro was steady at $1.4633 after earlier hitting a one-month high above $1.4650 in the wake of the May U.S. payrolls data on Friday. The euro has bounced nearly 4 percent in the past three weeks, helped by hopes that Greece is close to securing billions of euros in aid.

MORE GREEK DRAMA

A new aid package for Greece could cost more than 100 billion euros ($144 billion), German news magazine Der Spiegel said in its latest issue to appear on Monday.

Even with tens of thousands of Greeks taking to the streets to protest austerity measures yet to become law and European leaders still debating what to do about the country's mountain of debt, traders have been growing increasingly numb to the news flow surrounding Greece.

After speculators slashed their net long euro position in the International Monetary Market to a fifth of what it was a month ago, market positioning is not standing in the way of a further rebound in the common currency.

The next major obstacle for the euro on charts is $1.4710 -- the 76.4 percent retracement of the move down from $1.4940 to $1.3968. Given the negative sentiment building against the dollar though, $1.50 may draw the euro like a magnet.

The ECB may take the opportunity on Thursday after its policy meeting to prepare markets for an interest rate increase in July, an outcome that would widen rate differentials into the euro zone's favor.

"The ECB is likely to send a relatively hawkish message -- after all, growth in the euro area has been amongst the most resilient (and data surprises the least negative)," Barclays Capital strategists said in a note.

"It is therefore quite possible that the euro retests higher levels, especially against the backdrop of an improvement of the picture for peripheral bond markets."

The euro has drawn the attention of global investors because of how closely other markets have been tracking the currency's ups and downs.

The positive correlation between the euro and the Reuters-Jefferies CRB index of 19 commodity prices .CRB was running at more than twice its historical average, suggesting the strong likelihood that euro strength also will mean strength in commodities prices.

VALUE IN JAPAN?

Japan's Nikkei share average ended down 1.2 percent .N225, its lowest close since March 18.

Fast Retailing (9983.T), operator of the Uniqlo clothing chain, was the biggest drag on the Nikkei, down 2.7 percent, erasing Friday's gains. Shares of Tokyo Electric Power Co (9501.T), operator of the crisis-plagued Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, plunged 25 percent on fears of being delisted.

For Japan's stock market, a significant issue is whether valuations can contract any more than they already have in an economy waylaid by natural disasters and political ineffectiveness. Japanese equities were trading at 0.7 times current book value, Thomson Reuters StarMine showed, the second cheapest market in the G20. Italy is the only cheaper market.

"What other major global stock markets are undervalued to this extent?" said Kenichi Hirano, a strategist at Tachibana Securities. "The U.S. market may have entered a correction phase, but the Tokyo market may not follow suit."

Markets in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea were closed for a long holiday weekend, but traders were on watch for further tightening measures by China's central bank.

In commodities markets, U.S. crude futures inched lower but could resume a climb with the dollar's outlook darkening.

The July contract was down 0.2 percent at $100.05 a barrel.

Gulf Arab OPEC members led by Saudi Arabia look like they will push for an increase in supplies on Wednesday in an effort to support flagging world economic growth by bringing crude prices back below $100 a barrel. These expectations, however, have not had much a downward impact on oil prices yet.

(Additional reporting by Ayai Tomisawa in TOKYO and Reuters FX Analyst Krishna Kumar in SYDNEY; Editing by Ramya Venugopal)



Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin | Settlement Statement | WordPress Tutorials