Archive for the ‘Commodities’ Category

Fed Targets Inflation At 2%

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

The Fed yesterday said it plans to keep interest rates low through at least late 2014 and Chairman Ben Bernanke said policy makers are considering more bond purchases to boost growth. U.S. equities turned lower after new home-sales unexpectedly decreased, erasing gains triggered after earnings and orders for durable goods topped forecasts and initial jobless claims remained below 400,000. A third, fourth and fifth round of easing “lie ahead,” Bill Gross, wrote in his Twitter post. Talks on a debt swap to avert a Greek default resume today. Stocks reversed early gains that sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average to the highest level since 2008.

Ten-year Treasury yields slipped five basis points to 1.95 percent at 11:07 a.m. in New York after decreasing the most in two weeks yesterday. Nickel, wheat and copper climbed at least 1.9 percent to lead gains. Treasuries and commodities rose for a second day after the Federal Reserve yesterday pledged to keep interest rates low and said it is considering more bond purchases.

Weekly jobless claims gained 21,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 377,000, according to the Labor Department. Still, despite the increase, the figure still held below the 400,000 mark and the underlying trend continued to point to improving employment conditions. Economists had forecast claims rising to 370,000. New home sales posted a surprising drop of 2.2 percent in December for the first time in four months to a seasonally adjusted 307,000. Durable goods orders increased 3 percent in December, the second straight monthly gain, according to the Commerce Department. And leading indicators increased 0.4 percent to 94.3, rising to a five-month high in December, according to the Conference Board, pointing to continued momentum in the recovery. Economists had expected the index to increase 0.7.

Best Stocks & Sectors Of 2011

Friday, December 30th, 2011

As we round out 2011, let’s put this tumultuous year in review. It was the year of Social media frenzy IPO’s, regime change, European debt crisis beginning to unravel, US rating downgrade, and the year USA finally found Osama bin Laden. When the going gets tough, opportunities remain bountiful. 2011 has not exactly turned out the way many market pundits expected at the start of the year. The economy has slowed down to near-recession levels, the flight to safety has bond yields down to almost nothing, and most sectors remain under pressure. Still, there are almost always some stocks that manage to perform well despite the overall market. Wall Street Grand has evaluated the best performing stocks for 2011 based on year-to-date performance that fit within liquidity and size parameters and eliminating the mergers and acquisitions. Investors will be happy to put 2011 to bed. The markets had a choppy year to say the least. From Japan’s devastating earthquake to Europe’s worsening debt crisis to the ongoing bickering in Washington, stocks experienced some violent swings so it’s little wonder that investors are hoping for a quiet end to the year. Banks had the biggest drop among 19 industry groups this year, sliding 33 percent, on growing concern that the fiscal crisis will force at least one nation to default on its debt. Health-care and food stocks advanced as investors sought companies whose earnings are less tied to economic growth.    

If you missed the worst stocks of 2011 read here
 
 
Some investors might have guesses that Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) is among those stocks that are up the most, especially after it hit yet another all-time high this week. But Apple and its 27% move this year  does not even come close. We screened out companies with market capitalization rates above $300million mark at some point this year and we put a $5.00 minimum share price in this screen as well. We also set an average daily volume of 500,000 shares.

New Governments

New governments took charge in Greece and Italy last month, raising optimism that the region’s two most-indebted nations will implement austerity measures. Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos won approval for the final 2012 budget designed to regain the confidence of creditors and secure resumption of international financing. 

Treasuries and Bonds Best Performer of 2011

Treasuries rose, poised for their biggest annual gain since 2008, as investors sought the relative safety of U.S. government bonds on concern the euro-region debt crisis will worsen. U.S. debt has returned 9.6 percent in 2011, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch data, even after Standard & Poor’s cut the nation’s AAA rating on Aug. 5. German bunds also gained 9.6 percent, Japanese bonds advanced 2.1 percent and U.S. corporate debt rallied 7.3 percent. Treasuries are poised to beat stocks, commodities and the dollar for the year, even as reports indicate the U.S. economy is recovering. 

Stock Winners of 2011

2011 was the year of consolidation between competitors. In this portfolio review we have eliminated stocks that have been acquired or merged such as the likes VRUS and EP. We screened companies with market capitalization rates above $300million and we put a $5.00 minimum share price in this screen as well. We also set an average daily volume of 500,000 shares.    

Silicon Motion Technology Corp (SIMO) +392.24%    

Inhibitex, Inc (INHX) +308.46%    

Golar LNG Ltd (GLNG) +207.83%    

Medivation, Inc (MDVN) +207.05%    

Questcor Pharmaceuticals, Inc (QCOR) +185.68%    

Pharmacyclics Inc (PCYC) +147.70%    

Elan Corporation (ELN) +141.71%    

Select Comfort Corporation (SCSS) +141.07%    

Ariad Pharmaceuticals Inc (ARIA) +140.39%    

Oncothyreon Inc (ONTY) +133.44%    

Domino’s Pizza, Inc (DPZ) +115.55%    

Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, Inc (SPPI) +113.25%    

Richmont Mines Inc (RIC) +105.48%    

Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation (COG) +103.73%    

Jazz Pharmaceuticals (JAZZ) +95.07%    

Rounding the top 30 stocks is considered the BEST IPO stock of 2011    

GNC Holdings (GNC) +74.27%   

Best Sectors for 2011 (Utilities winner in 2011)

Utilities +13.47%   

Healthcare +10.04%   

Services +4.53%   

Consumer Goods +2.76%   

Conglomerates -3.39%   

Technology -3.40%   

Industrial Goods -4.46%   

Basic Materials -10.45%   

Financials -18.71%

Futures 2011 Performance YTD

Feeder Cattle +20.5%

30 YR Bond +18.6%

Heating Oil +15.3%

Pork Bellies +13.6%

Live Cattle +13.2%

Gold +11%

Crude Oil +8.9%

10 YR T-Notes +8.8%

DJIA +5.9%

USD +1.5%

Coffee -6.0%

Silver -8.7%

Nikkei 225 -17.5%

Platinum -21.1%

Copper -22.6%

Natural GAs -32.0%

Cotton -36.6%    

***Below is a live link feed of the futures from FINVIZ.COM

Yuan Bill Will Create Trade Wars With China

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

A bill to ensure America remains competitive in the global marketplace by protecting manufacturing jobs is moving forward in the U.S. Senate. Senate Amendment 1619, sponsored by Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and co-sponsored by Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., aims to punish China and other foreign countries for currency manipulation. Experts believe this practice has potentially cost America thousands of good-paying manufacturing jobs. The Chinese government manipulates its currency by keeping the value of the yuan artificially low to reduce the price of its exports. This manipulation gives China an unfair advantage over foreign competitors, meaning American-made goods become comparatively more expensive, leading to job loss in the manufacturing sector. China warned Washington on Tuesday that passage of a bill aimed at forcing Beijing to let its currency rise could lead to a trade war between the world’s top two economies.

The legislation Manchin supports would allow the U.S. to impose tariffs on imports that benefit from foreign government subsidies. Manchin has also cosponsored similar legislation to clarify that the U.S. can charge import taxes on goods that come from countries known to undervalue their currencies. In addition, the trade deficit has grown from $83 billion in 2001 to $273 billion in 2010. According to the Economic Policy Institute, 2.8 million American jobs were displaced because of this growing trade deficit.

Major U.S. industry groups sent an open letter to Senate leaders Wednesday, urging against planned legislation to pressure China into speeding up the appreciation of its currency. In the letter addressed to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, the groups said that while they agree on the need for a more flexible dollar-yuan exchange rate, “unilateral legislation on this issue would be counterproductive” and “will not create significant new jobs here at home.” They said such a move could hurt efforts on other fronts, including lobbying for more intellectual property protection in China and greater market access for U.S. firms. They also expressed doubt over whether taking the currency issue to the World Trade Organization would prove successful. The more than 50 signatories included the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Consumer Electronics Association, the National Retail Federation, the Business Roundtable, the U.S. Meat Export Federation, and the Aerospace Industries Association.

China warned Washington on Tuesday that passage of a bill aimed at forcing Beijing to let its currency rise could lead to a trade war between the world’s top two economies. China’s central bank and the ministries of commerce and foreign affairs accused Washington of “politicising” currency issues and putting the global economy at risk after U.S. senators voted on Monday to start a week of debate on the bill. The response suggested China sees a greater risk from the proposed bill than it has in the past when U.S. lawmakers attempted to put forward similar legislation to speed up the pace of appreciation in the yuan, or renminbi.

Tuesday’s coordinated salvo and the central bank’s warning of a trade war and a slowdown in China’s exchange rate reforms indicated Beijing was taking the latest currency bill more seriously. It is very rare for three different ministries of the country to refute something so quickly and strongly, showing how deeply the Chinese government is concerned about the yuan bill.

By using the excuse of a so-called ‘currency imbalance’, this will escalate the exchange rate issue, adopting a protectionist measure that gravely violates WTO rules and seriously upsets Sino-U.S. trade and economic relations. The Chinese could dump US bonds and the US dollar and create a massive vacuum. Something like this video can pan out and create utterless chaos. “The Day the Dollar Died”

Monday’s vote bolsters prospects for the bill to clear the Democrat-run Senate later this week, but prospects for action in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives are murky. If the bill did clear both chambers, it would present President Barack Obama with a tough decision on whether to sign the popular legislation into law and risk a trade war with Beijing, or veto it to pursue a more diplomatic approach.

Is CME Hintng Gold Bulls To Bail

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

U.S. exchange operator CME Group said late Wednesday it is raising the margin requirements for trade in a wide range of gold products, effective Thursday. The speculative margin requirement for a new position in Comex 100 gold futures will rise to $7,425 from $6,075, or to $5,500 from $4,500 for existing “current maintenance” margins. That increases the margin requirement by 22.2 percent. The sharp rally in gold futures, which have risen more than 9.5 percent in the past four sessions, had prompted market talk of a margin rise. A series of CME margin rises on silver in May provoked a massive sell-off in that metal and gave momentum to a slide across commodities markets. An exchange typically raises margin requirements to discourage excessive risk-taking. The CME last changed margins for COMEX 100 Gold Futures on June 16. The Shanghai Gold Exchange will also raise trading margins on three of its gold forward contracts to 11 percent from 10 percent starting Aug. 12.

Historically when margins are raised significantly it tends to cause a bit of sell-off. We’ve seen some of it now, but it’s difficult to see a great deal of selling, because we are in very, very volatile and uncertain times when markets are moving very violently. Gold has proven too much an attraction as an alternative investment and the margins may not have as much influence. The margin hike comes after the U.S. Federal Reserve’s statement to keep interest rates low failed to calm investors reeling from the news of a debt downgrade of the United States. A sharp fall in French bank stocks on Wednesday added to concern that the euro zone sovereign debt crisis could spread further.

Has the CME signaled that Bull rally is over with an early warning shot? I believe so. When the CME imposed a similar margin requirement followed by 3 additional margin restrictions, silver dropped from $50 to $38 in a matter of days. But who knows, if past history is any indicator of the future, I would take past history as a pretense.

Bernanke Confirms QE3 Not Ready For 2011

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

Markets this morning were up close to 70 points. Bernanke gave his testimony to Congress with regards to the current state economy. Traders were awaiting further details on QE3. Traders have become so dependent on extra liquidity in place of real growth. Quantitative easing has masked weakness in the economy. Every moment QE3 is mentioned by a Fed official, markets and commodities head higher. As we witnessed today, Bernanke downplayed QE3 clarifying the markets it will not be launched this year as I had suspected. Early to mid 2012 is the target. 10 year Bonds remain high @ 2.92 which suggests volatility remains. 

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke backed away slightly from promising a third round of stimulus measures, telling a Senate panel Thursday that the central bank is not prepared at this point to take further action. The comments during his second day of congressional testimony sent the US dollar higher and caused stocks and gold to pare their gains. Bernanke also repeated his warning that a U.S. debt default would be devastating for the U.S. and the global economy. Two ratings agencies have warned that the U.S. could lose its top credit rating in coming weeks if a standoff between the White House and congressional Republicans over raising the debt ceiling is not resolved.

Reports released on Thursday, however, showed some signs economic activity could be picking up. Retail sales rose in June, and claims for unemployment benefits fell last week. However, producer prices posted their steepest decline since February 2010 as energy prices eased. While Fed policymakers have been worried about rising inflation, the risk of a damaging deflationary spiral could force the central bank to act to promote growth.

QE3 In Planning Phase Says Bernanke

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Bernanke looks to keep his nickname “Helicopter Ben.” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress Wednesday that a new stimulus program is in the works that will entail additional asset purchases, the clearest indication yet that the central bank is contemplating another round of monetary easing. Bernanke said in prepared remarks that the economy is growing more slowly than expected, and should that continue the central bank stands at the ready with more accommodative measures. “Once the temporary shocks that have been holding down economic activity pass, we expect to again see the effects of policy accommodation reflected in stronger economic activity and job creation,” he said

My question Mr. Bernanke, if QE1 & QE2 did not spur job growth, what makes you think QE3 will? This will only spur artifical wealth to the middlelclass while the rich keep on getting richer. The only bright side I see to this is that pension funds and municipalities will have more time to recoup the loses incurred during “The Great Recession”. The dollar will continue to be devalued.

“However, given the range of uncertainties about the strength of the recovery and prospects for inflation over the medium term, the Federal Reserve remains prepared to respond should economic developments indicate that an adjustment in the stance of monetary policy would be appropriate.” Markets reacted immediately to the remarks, sending stocks up sharply in a matter of minutes. Gold & Silver prices continued to surge past record levels, while Treasury yields moved higher as well.

Delivering his twice-a-year economic report to Congress, Bernanke laid out three options the central bank would consider.

One option, Bernanke said, would be for the Fed to provide more “explicit guidance” to the pledge that rates will stay low for “an extended period.” Another approach would be another round of asset purchases, or quantitative easing, or for the Fed to “increase the average maturity of our holdings.” Bernanke said the Fed could launch another round of Treasury bond buying, the third such effort since 2009. It could cut the interest paid to banks on the reserves they hold as a way to encourage them to lend more. The Fed could also be more explicit in spelling out just how long it planned to keep rates at record-low levels. That would give investors confidence about the Fed’s efforts to continue supporting the economy.

Bernanke maintained that temporary factors, such as high food and gas prices, have slowed the economy. He said those factors should ease in the second half of the year and growth should pick up. But if that forecast proves wrong, he said the Fed is prepared to do more. (More likely to be launched by 2012 just in time for the election year) Bernanke also said it was possible that inflationary pressures spurred by higher energy and food prices may end up being more persistent than the Fed anticipates. He said that the central bank would be prepared to start raising interest rates faster than currently contemplated, if prices don’t moderate. Bernanke’s comments about inflation spoke to concerns expressed by some regional bank presidents at the Fed. The have criticized the Fed’s bond-buying program, saying it has increased the risk for higher inflation. The Fed has kept its key interest rate at a record low near zero since December 2008. Most private economists believe the Fed will not start raising interest rates until next summer. And some say the Fed won’t increase rates until 2013, based on the slumping economy.

Form of QE3 without adding to the Fed balance sheet. Read here

Exit Strategy

The Fed chairman detailed the “broad consensus” among Fed officials about how the Fed plans to exit its policy stance of a target federal-funds rate between 0% and 0.25% and holding roughly $2.6 trillion of securities. This agreement was unveiled in the minutes of the Fed’s June meeting. The suggested order of an exit from the current ultra-low stance on interest rates is first to cease reinvesting principal on bonds the Fed holds. After that, policy makers would either simultaneously or soon after change the forward guidance on the federal-funds rate, followed by raising the target for the federal-funds rate, and then selling agency securities after the first rate increase.

Bernanke defended the Fed’s controversial second round of asset purchases, or QE2, saying that it lowered long-term interest rates and boosted employment.  Bernanke said Fed officials still believed the unemployment rate would decline to a range of 8.6% to 8.9% by the fourth quarter. The jobless rate has moved up to 9.2% in June from 8.8% in March.

The strength of consumer spending will be a key determinant of the pace of the recovery in coming quarters, Bernanke said. Bernanke urged lawmakers not to give up on a more historic $4 billion deficit deal involving entitlements. “I, like many other people who watch budget developments, have been very excited by the idea that a very big program might be feasible and that we might do something that would stabilize our debt over the next decade. That would be a tremendous accomplishment,” Bernanke said. Bernanke pushed Congress to increase the debt ceiling, saying failure to act would spark a “major crisis” and roil the global economy. He said that the U.S. economy would certainly shed more jobs if the debt ceiling is not increased.

Gold & Silver

Gold surged to a record of $1,588.9 an ounce Wednesday as the possibility of more Federal Reserve stimulus coupled with Europe’s deepening debt crisis gave bullion its longest winning streak in five years. Fears that the euro zone debt crisis is spreading and uncertainty over frantic U.S. talks to raise its debt limit also underpinned precious metals. The yellow metal additionally hit all-time highs when priced in euro and sterling. Gold benefits from additional U.S. monetary easing because such a move would likely weaken the dollar and stir inflation down the road. The worst thing for gold would be to have the economy doing well enough that the Federal Reserve starts to normalize monetary policy, or conditions in the European Community begin to settle down.

Gold is set for an eighth consecutive day of gains, something it has not achieved since mid-October 2006, when it rose for nine days in a row. It has gained around 12 percent so far this year and more than doubled in price in the last four years. ”Gold will keep rising for the next five years, even if it has some crests and troughs,” said Michael Widmer, an analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “Those holding gold should hold onto it, while others should probably get their hands on it as it is going to be on an upward trend. “The sovereign debt crisis is helping the gold prices rise, but even if it is addressed in the short-term, the developed countries are in so much debt that it will continue to drive gold up for the next 10 years.” European Union leaders are expected to hold an emergency meeting on Friday after finance ministers acknowledged for the first time that some form of Greek default may be needed to cut Athens’ debts and stop contagion spreading to Italy and Spain.

Alcoa (NYSE:AA) 2011 Q2 Earnings Inline

Monday, July 11th, 2011

Alcoa aluminum factory

Alcoa (NYSE:AA) reported a sharp jump in earnings and revenue in part due to a rise in aluminum prices but analysts cautioned that the company’s results for the current quarter might fall short as prices have softened. Alcoa posted a profit of $322 million, or 28 cents a share, up from $136 million, or 13 cents a share, in the year-earlier period. Excluding charges, income from continuing operations came in at 32 cents a share. Revenue rose to $6.59 billion from $5.19 billion in the year-ago quarter. Analysts were looking for Alcoa to report earnings of 33 cents a share, on average. Sales were expected to reach $6.28. Alcoa is typically seen as a barometer of economic health in the U.S. and also as the unofficial start of the earnings season.

Basically earnings doubled. It was a good quarter. They didn’t do as well in the aluminum business because they had a 6 percent increase in prices but flat earnings. “Although the economic recovery is uneven, the overall outlook for Alcoa  and for aluminum  remains positive,” Chairman and Chief Executive Klaus Kleinfeld said in a statement. “Demand for aluminum continues to rise and so does growth in our major markets,” he continued. “These factors support our projection that aluminum demand will grow 12% this year and will double by 2020.” U.S. dollar, which makes it more expensive to import raw materials.

Alcoa shares closed down 2.9% at $15.91 before edging lower late. The stock, has managed to eke out a 3.4% gain so far this year. 

Aluminum sold in a range of $2,500 to $2,600 a tonne on the London Metal Exchange during the second quarter, up from $1.977 in the same quarter a year earlier. “The real issue is going to be looking ahead because the third-quarter aluminum price could be down 5 cents a pound,” said Charles Bradford, of Bradford Research in New York. “I think (analysts) are going to have to take the third-quarter estimates down.” Indeed, many analysts had already lowered their estimates for the second quarter as the price of aluminum has slipped in recent weeks but Alcoa ultimately met analysts’ earnings target.

Rare Earths- Underwater Deposits & WTO Ruling

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Japanese scientists announced that massive deposits of the 17 elements used to produce hybrid cars, laptops, smartphones and other high-tech devices can be extracted from the floor of the Pacific Ocean. The news may be one reason the Rare Earth Stocks Index is down 0.9%.Shares of Molycorp (MCP), the largest U.S.-based rare earths miner, and rival Avalon Rare Metals (AVL) are down 1% today after the news. The discovery was made by a group of researchers from the University of Tokyo and researchers from the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology. The deposits are in international waters in an area stretching east and west of Hawaii, as well as east of Tahiti in French Polynesia. It is estimated that the newly discovered deposits hold 80-100 billion tons of rare earths deposits, well above the U.S. Geological Survey’s global estimate of 110 million tons. The news could be significant for Japan, which accounts for a third of global rare earths demand, in terms of diversifying away from Chinese supplies. China controls 95% of the global rare earths export market.

Speaking of China, shares of Australian rare earths miner Lynas Corporation (LYSCF) are surging 5% after the company said rare earths prices in China have declined to start July compared to where they were at this point in June. Lynas, as Molycorp said earlier this year, expects China to become a net importer of rare earths over the next several years. Looking at other Index members, Rare Element Resources (REE) is off 3%, but Neo Material Technol (NEMFF) and Market Vectors Rare Earth/Strategic Metals ETF (REMX) are both higher by 1%.

WTO Ruling on China’s Curbing

China broke international law when it curbed exports of coveted raw materials, the World Trade Organization ruled Tuesday, in a landmark case threatening Beijing’s defense for similar export brakes on rare earths. A WTO legal panel dismissed China’s claim that its system of export duties and quotas on raw materials used in the production of steel, electronics and medicines  served to protect its environment and scarce resources. China struck a defiant note in response to the ruling, which it is expected to appeal.

The WTO said in a statement, “The panel found that China’s export duties were inconsistent with the commitments that China had agreed to in its protocol of accession.” ”The panel also found that export quotas imposed by China on some of the raw materials were inconsistent with WTO rules,” it added. The ruling hands a victory to the United States, the EU and Mexico, which took China to the WTO in 2009 saying export restrictions on raw materials including coke, bauxite and magnesium discriminated against foreign manufacturers and give an unfair advantage to domestic producers. It coincides with growing anxiety among markets and policymakers about a trend among resource-rich countries to rein in exports of commodities from wheat to iron ore as supplies fall behind global demand. The WTO issued an unusually stark warning about such export policies last month, saying they risked creating serious shortages. The case is of particular importance to the EU, whose raw materials purchases from abroad make up 10 percent of its total imports, and which are used in production and manufacturing processes it says employ 30 million Europeans. China produces 97 percent of the world’s supplies of the crucial industrial inputs, and has begun cutting exports to the dismay of importers.

EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht called for a negotiated peace with Beijing to avoid a full-fledged trade war, and vowed to address the issue during a visit to Beijing next week. But he insisted the EU, United States and Mexico could still opt for legal action if China failed to cooperate. ”What is important about this judgement is that it sets the rules for the future and that it will become an important element in discussions with every country” that restricts raw material exports.

China said it regretted the WTO’s decision, insisting its export policies are based on environmental and resource protection — a justification likely to resonate with nations such as Russia, Ukraine and India that are also reining in their resource sales. China takes the view that although these measures have a certain impact on domestic and international users, they are in line with the objective of sustainable development promoted by the WTO and they help to induce the resource industry toward healthy development,” the Chinese government said in a statement from its embassy in Geneva, where the WTO is based. The statement reinforced the widely held expectation that Beijing will appeal the ruling, a move that could delay any amendments to duties and quotas by several years and create pressure for a negotiated peace. An appeal could also overturn part of Tuesday’s ruling, and trade observers said they expected Washington, Brussels and Mexico City to hold off any new legal claims until the strength of China’s appeal became clearer.

Senate Cancels Summer Recess For Debt Ceiling

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

U.S. stocks opened incredibly higher (4the day in a row with triple digit gains) on Thursday as portfolio positioning moves on the final day of the second quarter trumped economic data, which had the government reporting a 12th straight week of jobless claims above 400,000. Today’s jobless claims number would have had to surprise on the high side to invite sellers back into the market. Fortunately for the bulls, the calendar fits into their plan to encourage risk. The DJIA up 125 points skyrocketed from the initial opening and opened the flood gates for more pressure covering from short sellers. The S&P closely watched level of 1313 was breached, but to early to indicate things have turned around. We’ll wait and see.

The U.S. Senate will cancel its planned July 4 recess next week and remain in session beginning Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said. In making the announcement Thursday on the floor of the Senate, Reid noted the need for Congress to pass legislation raising U.S. borrowing authority. But he did not say that such a bill would be ready for the Senate to debate next week. Instead, Reid, a Democrat, said Republicans were “willing to risk our economy” by standing in the way of a debt limit increase if a related deficit-reduction measure included any. This sparked buying interest even further.

QE2 To QE3?

The Federal Reserve ends its $600 billion bond-buying program, known as QE2, Thursday and has yet to offer any hints of more monetary easing to come. That hasn’t stopped investors from wondering what new tricks the central bank may have in its repertoire should the U.S. economy’s struggles continue in the second half of 2011.

Bill Gross, manager of PIMCO, the world’s largest bond fund, said last week the Fed may signal as soon as August that it stands ready to print more money if the economy worsens and recession starts looking like a real possibility. I personally have been saying the Fed may use the proceeds from the toxic assets it inherited named Maiden Lane, but I do not foresee the use until 2012. Traders will be disappointed as they have become addicted to money printing. They’ve become addicts to the printing presses. People get hooked on them, and before one program ends, they’re thinking about when the next one will come along.

Including QE2, the central bank’s unprecedented policies in recent years have pumped $2.3 trillion into the financial system. After a recent run of weak economic data, Fed chief Ben Bernanke said last week that “a little bit of time to see what happens would be useful” before taking more policy decisions. The end of QE2 today comes just as the U.S. economy is losing steam. Growth slowed sharply in the first quarter and data has yet to signal a quick recovery. The jobless rate remains above 9 percent. Part of the Fed’s mandate is to support full employment, so they will have to stay involved.

Of course, if the economy regains its footing, talk of QE3 will fade just as quickly, analysts say. For one thing, higher inflation may tie the Fed’s hands. Core consumer prices, which strip out food and energy, rose 1.5 percent in the year to May. That’s not alarmingly high but it is near 2 percent, the top of the Fed comfort zone, and well above a frighteningly low 0.6 percent in October. What’s more, the Fed will likely remain the biggest Treasury buyer as it reinvests principal payments from the government and mortgage debt it owns. More than $110 billion of Treasuries held on the Fed’s balance sheet are set to mature in the next 12 months, and analysts predict it could reinvest up to $190 billion from maturing mortgage-backed bonds over that time. With deflation no longer a clear and present danger, that may be enough. Political opposition to more easing is also running high.

The move last week by industrialized countries to release 60 million barrels of oil from emergency reserves may have been a miniQE3 substitute: an alternative way to take pressure off consumers and small businesses and jump-start growth.

Incomes Growing At A Negative Pace

Monday, June 27th, 2011

When taking into account of inflation rising with the likes of commodities gaining at a rapid pace, incomes actually grew at a negative pace. Consumers have been less inclined to spending which makes up 35% of US GDP. Consumer spending was flat in May , government data showed Monday, as higher prices at the gas pump and a weak labor market made consumers reluctant to open their wallets. This was the weakest reading in almost a year. Consumer spending adjusted for inflation declined 0.1% for the second straight month in May, the Commerce Department said.

Meanwhile, personal income rose 0.3% in May. May’s figures came in mixed in terms of market expectations. Spending rose less than the 0.1% expected. Growth in both income and spending were revised lower for April. Spending was cut to an increase of 0.3% from the initial estimate of a 0.4% increase, while income was revised to 0.3% growth from the 0.4% gain previously estimated. The personal consumption expenditure index, which Federal Reserve officials say is a more accurate gauge of inflation than the better-known consumer price index, increased 0.2% on the month. On a year-over-year basis, the PCE price index is up 2.5%. The core rate of inflation, which excludes food and energy prices, rose 0.3% in May, the largest gain since October 2009. The 12-month core rate was up 1.2%, still well below the Fed’s implicit target of just below 2%. Adjusted for inflation, after-tax incomes rose 0.1% in May.

While the report fits in with other data illustrating the loss of momentum in the economy, falling gasoline prices should lift spending and therefore growth in the third quarter. Gasoline prices have dropped significantly from their peak of $4.02 a gallon in early May. The U.S. savings rate rose to 5.0% in May from 4.9% in the prior two months.