Sunday, February 10, 2008
ΔΗΜΟΣΚΟΠΗΣΗ - ''ΠΤΩΣΗ'' (ΑΠΟΤΕΛΕΣΜΑΤΑ)
ΤΑ ΑΠΟΤΕΛΕΣΜΑΤΑ ΤΗΣ ΔΗΜΟΣΠΟΠΗΣΗΣ ΠΟΥ ΕΛΕΙΞΕ ΤΗΝ 10η ΦΕΒΡΟΥΑΡΙΟΥ 2008.
ΠΟΥ ΟΦΕΙΛΕΤΕ Η ΜΕΓΑΛΗ ΠΡΟΣΦΑΤΗ ΠΤΩΣΗ ΤΟΥ ΧΑΚ;
ΣΤΗN ΔΙΕΘΝH ΠΤΩΣΗ ΤΩΝ ΧΡΗΜΑΤΙΣΤΗΡΙΩΝ 17 (68%)
ΣΤΑ ΜΕΙΩΜΕΝΑ ΚΕΡΔΗ ΤΩΝ ΚΥΠΡΙΑΚΩΝ ΕΙΣΗΓΜΕΝΩΝ ΕΤΑΙΡΕΙΩΝ 3 (12%)
ΣΤΗΝ ΑΠΟΥΣΙΑ ¨ΧΡΗΜΑΤΙΣΤΗΡΙΑΚΗΣ¨ ΨΥΧΟΛΟΓΙΑΣ ΜΕΤΑΞΥ ΤΩΝ ΕΠΕΝΔΥΤΩΝ 20 (80%)
*ΓΙΝΟΝΤΑΝ ΔΕΚΤΑ ΠΟΛΛΑΠΛΑ ΠΕΔΙΑ ΕΠΙΛΟΓΗΣ
Votes: 25
Poll closed
Στα 91,77 δολ. έκλεισε η τιμή του πετρελαίου στη Νέα Υόρκη
Στα 91,77 δολ. έκλεισε η τιμή του πετρελαίου στη Νέα Υόρκη
Η τιμή του αμερικανικού αργού πετρελαίου για συμβόλαια παράδοσης Μαρτίου έκλεισε αυξημένη κατά 3,66 δολάρια, στα 91,77 δολάρια το βαρέλι, στην προθεσμιακή αγορά της Νέας Υόρκης (NYMEX). Στο Λονδίνο, το πετρέλαιο Μπρεντ έκλεισε με αύξηση 3,43 δολαρίων, στα 91,94 δολάρια το βαρέλι.
G-7 Growth Warning May Prompt Additional Rate Cuts, Lower Taxes
G-7 Growth Warning May Prompt Additional Rate Cuts, Lower Taxes
Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Group of Seven officials, warning of further financial-market turmoil, indicated they'll be forced into more interest-rate cuts and tax reductions to shore up the global economy.
Finance ministers and central bankers ended a weekend meeting in Tokyo with a statement that ``downside risks persist,'' including the U.S. housing slump and tighter credit conditions. Without proposing specific remedies, the group pledged ``appropriate actions, individually and collectively.''
The speed at which the American credit-market collapse spread to other parts of the world demonstrates the need for greater communication and coordination, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said. More than $6.7 trillion has been wiped off the value of global stocks since the beginning of the year.
``There are going to be more steps coming,'' said Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman Inc. in New York. ``The problems of the world economy aren't going to be solved by joint measures, but individual ones.''
Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney signaled he'll lower rates, and European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet repeated that risks to Europe's expansion have increased. Luxembourg Finance Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who represents the 15-nation euro region, said some European countries have room to cut taxes or increase spending.
G-7 officials also discussed measures to tighten oversight of financial markets without reaching agreement, and kept pressure on China to allow the yuan to appreciate.
Paulson Dismisses `Myth'
``The current financial turmoil is serious and persisting,'' Paulson said. ``I always thought that decoupling was a myth. What happens in any country, that's a major country, impacts what happens in the rest of the world.''
Service industries in the euro region expanded at the slowest pace in more than four years in January, and business and consumer confidence retreated, reports last week showed. The risk of companies defaulting on high-risk, high-yield loans as measured by the benchmark Markit iTraxx LevX Senior Index rose to a record.
``We are observing an ongoing, significant market correction'' and ``unusually high uncertainty'' is hurting growth prospects, Trichet told reporters after the G-7 meeting.
``If the situation worsens in the markets we'll see greater coordination,'' said Stephen Jen, chief currency strategist at Morgan Stanley in London. The slowdown isn't severe enough for them to ``step on the gas'' right now.
U.S. Package
Germany and Japan signaled they have no plans to follow the example of the U.S. government, which approved a package including tax rebates worth $168 billion to spur growth.
The G-7, which consists of the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Italy, France, Germany and Japan, also cited ``heightened inflation expectations in some countries,'' suggesting some central banks want to limit rate-cut expectations.
Even as officials traveled to Tokyo, some executives fretted the crisis could worsen as subprime losses ricochet through the financial system. Deutsche Bank AG Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann said Feb. 7 that rating downgrades for bond insurers pose a new, ``tsunami-like'' risk for markets.
The group said it would promote efforts by banks to improve disclosure of their liabilities and pledged to act on regulators' recommendations to enhance financial stability.
Stability Forum
Its position reflects initial findings of the Financial Stability Forum of international regulators, which will present its full report to the G-7 in April.
Risks remain ``that further shocks may lead to a prolonged recurrence of the acute liquidity pressures experienced last year,'' said Bank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi, who drafted the report. The G-7 estimates banks worldwide will suffer writedowns of $400 billion, German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said.
Action may come from central bankers and politicians. Canada's Carney, in his first month as governor, signaled on Feb. 9 the central bank will cut rates, saying ``the timing and degree of that stimulus will be determined at future fixed announcement dates.'' The next decisions are March 4 and April 22.
Juncker said ``fiscal policy can contribute to stabilizing output'' and Trichet passed on an opportunity to quash investors' bets on a rate cut in forthcoming months.
The G-7 also kept up pressure on China to allow the yuan to rise faster after Canadian and European officials complained their currencies are bearing too much of the dollar's fall.
Yuan Appreciation
``We encourage accelerated appreciation of its effective exchange rate,'' the statement said. The yuan has climbed more than 12 percent against the dollar and fallen about 6 percent against the euro since a decade-long peg was abandoned in 2005.
``While the U.S. may be pleased with the progress made, the Europeans are still focused on the euro-yuan rate and may not be that happy it hasn't changed that much,'' said Jen.
For now, the G-7's main concern is that contagion from the subprime rout will spread further and wider than forecast, and some economists said pessimism could make things worse.
``There's a danger that the downturn will become a self- fulfilling prophecy,'' said Gilles Moec, an economist at Bank of America Corp. in London.
BLOOMBERG
Retail Sales Probably Fell in January: U.S. Economy Preview
Retail Sales Probably Fell in January: U.S. Economy Preview
Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Sales at U.S. retailers fell in January for a second month, signaling the biggest part of the economy may be starting to stumble, economists said before reports this week.
Purchases dropped 0.3 percent after decreasing 0.4 percent in December, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News ahead of a Feb. 13 report from the Commerce Department. Other reports may show factory production weakened and the trade deficit shrank.
Sustained declines in consumer spending brought on by falling property values and rising unemployment would confirm the economic expansion had come to an end, economists said. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson are scheduled to testify before the Senate this week on the economic outlook.
``The consumer has long been under stress and is now showing signs of cracking,'' said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at Global Insight Inc. in Lexington, Massachusetts. ``The downturn is now spreading more broadly through the economy.''
The back-to-back decrease in sales would be the first in four years. Consumer spending accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy.
Auto Sales
Auto dealers are among retailers suffering from the slump in housing and employment. Cars and light trucks sold last month at a 15.2 million annual pace, down 6.7 percent from December. Industry sales this year are forecast to drop to the lowest level since 1998.
AutoNation Inc., the largest publicly traded U.S. car dealer, last week said fourth-quarter profit dropped to a six- year low as cooling economies in California and Florida, two states bearing the brunt of the decline in housing, pulled down sales.
The retail sales report may show purchases excluding automobiles climbed 0.2 percent, after a 0.4 percent drop in December, according to the Bloomberg median. An increase in receipts at service stations as gasoline prices rose probably contributed to the gain, economists said.
Falling stock prices and stricter lending rules also caused Americans to curb spending, even as retailers slashed prices by as much as 75 percent last month. Purchases at stores open at least a year rose 0.5 percent from a year earlier, the worst January since 1970, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers.
Macy's Inc., the second-biggest U.S. department-store chain, cut its fourth-quarter profit forecast last week and said it will eliminate 2,300 jobs.
`Difficult' Environment
``It is a difficult retail environment out there, and I expect it will be going forward,'' Terry Lundgren, chief executive officer of Cincinnati-based Macy's, said in an interview last week.
Americans are growing more pessimistic as job losses mount, home values fall and fuel prices rise. The Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of consumer sentiment for this month fell to 76, from 78.4 in January, according to the survey median ahead of a Feb. 15 report.
As U.S. demand wanes, the economy is becoming increasingly dependent on overseas orders to help avert a collapse in manufacturing growth. Output at factories, mines and utilities rose 0.1 percent in January after stalling the prior month, economists said ahead of a Fed report Feb. 15.
A Commerce Department report on Feb. 14 may show the trade deficit shrank in December for the first time in four months as the cost of imported oil fell, according to economists surveyed.
Lower Dollar
A drop in the dollar's value, which makes American goods cheaper for buyers overseas, also kept exports growing last month and narrowed the gap to $61.5 billion from $63.1 billion in November, the survey showed.
Bernanke and Paulson testify before the Senate Banking Committee on Feb. 14. Investors and analysts will be trying to gauge how worried policy makers are about the extent of the economic slowdown.
``We expect Bernanke to admit that the downside risks to growth have risen substantially,'' said Drew Matus, a senior economist at Lehman Brothers Holdings in New York, who forecasts central bankers will lower the benchmark interest rate by another half percentage point to 2.5 percent at the March meeting.
A U.S. recession over the next 12 months is now an even bet, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists taken from Jan. 30 to Feb. 7. The odds rose from 40 percent in January.
BLOOMBERG
''Κατρακυλά'' το ευρώ έναντι του δολαρίου
''Κατρακυλά'' το ευρώ έναντι του δολαρίου
Προς τις μεγαλύτερες απώλειες σε διάστημα 1 ½ έτους «οδεύει» το ευρωπαϊκό νόμισμα έναντι του αμερικανικού, στο απόηχο της χθεσινής ομιλίας του Προέδρου της Ευρωπαϊκής Κεντρικής Τράπεζας, Ζαν Κλωντ Τρισέ, που εκτιμάται ότι άφησε ανοιχτό το ενδεχόμενο μείωσης του κόστους δανεισμού.
Οι αναλυτές επισημαίνουν ότι το ευρώ θα δεχθεί περαιτέρω πιέσεις καθώς πέραν της μείωσης του επιτοκίου του ευρώ που αναμένουν τον Απρίλιο, θα ακολουθήσει για μία τρίτη, μάλλον τον Αύγουστο.
Το ευρώ έχει υποχωρήσει κατά 2,2% από την αρχή της εβδομάδας και βρίσκεται στα 1,4481 έναντι του δολαρίου ενώ άγγιξε ακόμη και το 1,4440, ήτοι τα χαμηλότερα επίπεδα από τις 22 Ιανουαρίου.
REPORTER.GR
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